
English
8th Grade
CCSS covered

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15 questions
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1.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
A famous professional organizer, known for helping people declutter, has a house so messy you can barely walk through it. What is this an example of?
Situational irony
Dramatic irony
Verbal irony
A normal coincidence
Answer explanation
This is situational irony because the outcome (a messy house) is the opposite of what you would expect from a professional organizer.
Tags
CCSS.L.8.5A
2.
MATCH QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
Match each type of irony to its correct definition.
When someone says the opposite of what they actually mean.
Situational Irony
When the outcome of an event is the opposite of what was expected.
Verbal Irony
When the audience knows something that the characters in a story do not.
Dramatic Irony
Answer explanation
Each type of irony is correctly matched with its definition. Verbal irony involves words, situational irony involves outcomes, and dramatic irony involves audience knowledge.
3.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
After tripping and spilling his entire drink on his new shoes, Leo muttered, "Oh, fantastic. Just how I wanted to start my day." What is Leo's comment an example of?
A genuine expression of happiness
Sarcasm
Situational irony
A literal statement
Answer explanation
Leo is using sarcasm. He says the opposite of what he feels ('fantastic') to express his frustration in a mocking way. Sarcasm is a form of verbal irony.
Tags
CCSS.RL.11-12.6
4.
CATEGORIZE QUESTION
3 mins • 1 pt
Sort the following events into the categories: Ironic Situation or Coincidence.
Groups:
(a) Ironic Situation
,
(b) Coincidence
It rains after you finish washing your car.
You and your friend show up wearing the same shirt.
A pilot has a fear of heights.
A fire station burns down.
Answer explanation
A fire station burning down and a pilot fearing heights are ironic because they are the opposite of what is expected. Wearing the same shirt or rain after a car wash are just unfortunate coincidences, not ironic.
Tags
CCSS.L.8.5A
5.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
In a scary movie, the audience sees the villain hiding in the closet, but the main character, feeling safe, decides to hide in that same closet. This creates suspense because of...
verbal irony.
situational irony.
dramatic irony.
a character flaw.
Answer explanation
This is dramatic irony because the audience has knowledge (the villain is in the closet) that the character does not, creating tension and suspense.
Tags
CCSS.L.8.5A
6.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
What is the main difference between verbal irony and sarcasm?
Verbal irony is spoken, while sarcasm is written.
Sarcasm is a type of verbal irony that is intended to mock or show contempt.
Verbal irony is always funny, but sarcasm is always mean.
There is no difference; they are the exact same thing.
Answer explanation
While all sarcasm is verbal irony, not all verbal irony is sarcastic. Sarcasm specifically uses a mocking or contemptuous tone to convey its meaning.
Tags
CCSS.RL.11-12.6
7.
MATCH QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
Match each scenario to the type of irony it best represents.
Verbal Irony
Looking at a messy room, a mom says, "I see you've been working hard on cleaning up."
Situational Irony
A marriage counselor files for divorce.
Dramatic Irony
A character in a play says, "I feel so safe here!" while the audience knows a villain is waiting for them.
Answer explanation
The first is dramatic irony (audience knows more), the second is situational irony (unexpected outcome), and the third is verbal irony (saying the opposite of what's true).
Tags
CCSS.L.8.5A
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