These exercises are designed to reinforce your understanding of sarcasm in English as covered in the course. Test your ability to identify, use, and reframe dry wit and ironic tone at C1 level.
→ See the course : Expressing sarcasm in English : complete course
Exercice 1 — Recognising Sarcastic Intent
Choose the response that best identifies the sarcastic meaning behind each statement.
- Someone arrives two hours late and their colleague says: 'Oh, brilliant — so glad you could finally join us.' What does the speaker actually mean?
- After a disastrous presentation, someone says: 'Well, that went swimmingly.' What is the true tone of this remark?
- A friend forgets your birthday and later says: 'Of course I remembered — I just didn't say anything.' Which sarcastic device is most likely being used in a mocking reply such as: 'Right, because silence is the classic way to celebrate someone.'?
- A manager responds to a poor report with: 'Absolutely riveting work — I nearly fell asleep twice.' What effect does this sarcastic comment achieve?
Correction
- B) They are annoyed and expressing frustration through ironic praise.
- C) Dry sarcasm implying the presentation went very badly.
- B) Ironic literalism used to highlight the absurdity of the excuse.
- C) It criticises the report's quality while maintaining a veneer of mock enthusiasm.
Exercice 2 — Completing Sarcastic Exchanges
Complete each dialogue with a sarcastic response that fits the context naturally. Write a full sentence using dry wit, irony, or deadpan tone as studied in the course.
- A: 'I've just sent you a 47-slide presentation to read before tomorrow morning.' B: '___'
- A: 'Sorry, I accidentally deleted the file we spent three weeks on.' B: '___'
- A: 'The meeting has been moved to 7 a.m. on Saturday.' B: '___'
- A: 'They gave the promotion to someone who started last month.' B: '___'
Correction
- B: 'Oh, fantastic — because I was absolutely desperate for something to do at midnight.'
- B: 'Oh, no worries at all — it's not like we had anything remotely important in there.'
- B: 'Wonderful — because Saturday mornings at dawn are exactly when I do my best thinking.'
- B: 'Oh, clearly a perfectly logical decision — experience is so overrated these days.'
Exercice 3 — From Sincere to Sarcastic
Rewrite each sincere sentence as a sarcastic version that conveys the opposite meaning using irony, dry wit, or mock enthusiasm, as practised in the course.
- Sincere: 'This is a terrible idea and it will never work.'
- Sincere: 'You've done almost nothing to help with this project.'
- Sincere: 'The traffic was awful and I was stuck for two hours.'
- Sincere: 'Nobody laughed at his joke and the room went silent.'
Correction
- Sarcastic: 'Oh yes, this is clearly the most inspired idea anyone has had all year — what could possibly go wrong?'
- Sarcastic: 'Thank you so much for your enormous contribution — we truly couldn't have done absolutely everything ourselves without you.'
- Sarcastic: 'Oh, it was a delightful two-hour tour of the motorway — I can't think of a better way to spend an afternoon.'
- Sarcastic: 'The joke landed beautifully — you could practically hear the tumbleweeds rolling across the room.'
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