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Recently I had a test in college that asks us to give an example of irony.

I wrote this word by word:

An astronaut had over 200 missions into space over two decades. Ironically, two days after he returned from his latest mission, he tripped on a banana peel and died.

But I did not get any marks for it (it weighs 3 marks). Is it not an example of irony?

Edwin
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Your college needs to phrase its questions better. You have given a totally acceptable example of what Nordquist ( http://grammar.about.com/od/il/g/ironyterm.htm ) calls situational irony while they probably wanted an example of what he calls verbal irony (antiphrasis). He lists a third type of irony; I've misplaced the article I know I filed somewhere, which lists about six, if my memory serves me right.

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It's not good irony. It's mildly ironic to survive long exposure to a dangerous environment only to die after short exposure in a purportedly safe one.

The problem might be that neither the dangerousness of space nor the safety of the home (if that's where it happened) are the most prominent aspects of those places. You might pick place more noted for their chance of accidental death (combat and a hospital perhaps)?

Also, although this is tangential to irony, "slipping on a banana peel" is a cliché in writing and not actually dangerous in fact. One researcher called ERs all over the US trying to find a case of someone who been injured that way, without success.

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No, it isn't irony. A true example of irony would be:

"A cats protection van drive stated that he takes pride in his work a few days ago. Ironically, yesterday, he ran over a cat by accident"

The ironic part is that a person who was supposed to protect cats accidentally killed one.

DubGamer87
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