Year 7 Reading: Irony_and_dramatic_irony
6 practice questions on irony_and_dramatic_irony for Year 7 students, aligned to the Australian Curriculum V9 NAPLAN assessment framework.
Sample Year 7 Reading — Irony_and_dramatic_irony Questions
There is an element of irony in the fact that Yusuf's most effective moment in the interview was an answer he had not prepared. This irony suggests that
The father's final words: 'You'll know it when you hear it': are ironic in the context of a train that no longer runs because
There is irony in the fact that Fatima's most memorable dive is also the one she will 'remember least' by its number. This irony suggests that
There is dramatic irony in the detail that Zara 'knew the part better than she knew her own reflection.' This is ironic because
The final revelation that the narrator's name is painted on the stern creates dramatic irony in relation to the grandfather's refusal to sell the boat because
The narrator says Samara 'did not know yet that she would spend the next six years following where they led.' This is an example of dramatic irony because
These are samples from our bank of 6+ questions. Sign up for a free practice test to experience the full test format with AI feedback.
Start Practising FreeContent reviewed by the BandBoost Education Team
All questions are aligned to the Australian Curriculum Version 9.0 (ACARA) and mapped to the NAPLAN Assessment Framework.
Learn more about our team →Other Year 7 Subjects
Other Year Levels for Reading
Practise irony_and_dramatic_irony with AI feedback
Take a full Year 7 Reading test and get specific feedback on irony_and_dramatic_irony questions.
Start free test