Dramatic Irony | Meaning | Definition
Dramatic Irony
(Noun)
Dramatic Irony is a situation created in a dramatic work to show that the audience knows a piece of information but the character of the story does not seem to know. Dramatic irony is often tragic. 0 0 0.
N. B. The article originally belongs to the book entitled ‘Menonimus Dictionary of Definition‘.
Books on Literary Criticism by M. Menonimus:
- World Short Story Criticism
- World Poetry Criticism
- World Drama Criticism
- World Novel Criticism
- World Essay Criticism
- Indian English Poetry Criticism
- Indian English Poets and Poetry Chief Features
- Emily Dickinson’s Poetry-A Thematic Study
- Walt Whitman’s Poetry-A Thematic Study
- Critical Essays on English Poetry
- Tawfiq al-Hakim’s Novel: Return of the Spirit-An Analytical Study
- Tawfiq al-Hakim’s Novel: ‘Yawmiyyat Naib Fil Arayaf’-An Analytical Study
- Analytical Studies of Some Arabic Short Stories
- A Brief History of Arabic Literature: Pre-Islamic Period (500 AD-622 AD)
- A Brief History of Arabic Literature: Early Islamic Period (622 AD-661 AD) …
Related Search:
- Dramatic Irony | English Meaning-Cambridge Dictionary
- Definition & Meaning-Merriam Webster
- Â Definition and Meaning-Dictionary.Com
- Definition Meaning & Synonyms Vocabulary.com