Answer:
Yes. I'm agreed with you.
The answer to this would be verbal irony.
Irony is a discrepancy or an incongruence between what is anticipated and to what it actually is. There are three types of irony. One would be verbal irony which, as the name suggests, revolves around speaking or what is said. The other two would be dramatic irony and situation irony. Dramatic irony is usually used in plays, dramas, and the like that involves the audience's awareness. Situation irony would be more involved with what's happening around.
Answer:
- speaker
- meter
- enjambment
- quatrain
- couplet
- prosody
- free verse
- blank verse
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The sentence that has an adjective clause is the third one - <span>Liz, who could always make people laugh, was loved by the whole block.
Here, the adjective clause is <em>who could always make people laugh, </em>because it describes the subject, <em>Liz.
</em><em />The other sentences have only adverb clauses.
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