0 the use of remarks that clearly mean the opposite of what they say, made in order to hurt someone's feelings or to criticize something in a humorous way:
1 remarks that mean the opposite of what they say, made to criticize someone or something in a way that is amusing to others but annoying to the person criticized:
However, their implicit sarcasm maintains the threat of allencompassing alienation.
Speech coded as devaluing is characterized by belittling, criticism, mocking sarcasm, or derogatory or condescending language.
Talk is cheap: sarcasm, alienation, and the evolution of language.
The book's darkness, fluttered momentarily by sarcasm, punctured in places by genuine humour or brilliant observation, is at once its triumph and a major problem.
One suspects that all the clerks, related or not, feared the first secretary's lashing tongue : sarcasm and irony could be effective instruments of discipline.
Many of the examples involve irony, sarcasm, satire, understatement, or hyperbole, requiring the listener to figure out what the nonliteral intention of the speaker is.
How children understand sarcasm : the role of context and intonation.
Differential effect of right- and left-hemisphere damage on understanding sarcasm and metaphor.
中文繁体
諷刺,挖苦,嘲笑…
More中文简体
讽刺,挖苦,嘲笑…
MoreEspañol
sarcasmo, sarcasmo [masculine, singular]…
MorePortuguês
sarcasmo…
More日本語
皮肉, いやみ…
MoreTürk dili
gizli ve ince alay, dokunaklı söz, iğneleme…
MoreFrançais
sarcasme [masculine], sarcasme…
MoreCatalan
sarcasme…
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