How to Use ironist in a Sentence

ironist

noun
  • Less to the fore in Mr. Prochnik’s treatment is Heine the ironist, who made fun of everybody’s ideals and passions, including his own.
    Adam Kirsch, WSJ, 18 Dec. 2020
  • Paul Wasserman, the bearded ironist who is the head press agent for the tour, managed to sneak a handful of visitors into the Garden.
    Mick Stevens, The New Yorker, 12 Aug. 2021
  • Ambiguous irony lets the ironist and his audience laugh twice: first at the joke, then at whoever doesn’t get it.
    Dan Brooks, New York Times, 7 Oct. 2020
  • And Mair—mostly offstage—sounds like an ironist, more protected than Heloise against the danger of the stories their mother weaves around them.
    Deborah Treisman, The New Yorker, 6 Apr. 2020
  • The writer who could create both Sir John and Hamlet, that quintessential ironist torn between thought and action, could be treated only with awe.
    The Economist, 24 Oct. 2019
  • The perennial significance of the Joker has made him an omnipresent reference online, both for sincere fans and for ironists.
    Dan Brooks, New York Times, 2 Oct. 2019
  • An ironist might be suspicious of its concerns: parting, loss, family, war.
    Charles Finch, USA TODAY, 2 Oct. 2017
  • Machado was a gentle romantic who blossomed into a wicked ironist.
    New York Times, 14 June 2018
  • This fight—between, ironists will note, a billionaire and a man who wants to ban billionaires, and neither of them really even a Democrat—would produce a dramatic, public split.
    Michael Tomasky, The New York Review of Books, 27 Feb. 2020
  • Mac, who comes off as a sincere ironist in conversation, rejects the grant-speak claims about most interactive performance.
    Charles McNulty, latimes.com, 14 Mar. 2018
  • Marchand and Meffre are ironists with a particular interest in the early-20th-century belief in progress.
    Edward Carr, 1843, 29 Aug. 2019
  • The film’s abject failure, on the other hand, has attracted queers, downtown ironists, camp enthusiasts, and anyone looking for a Hollywood product that is not about the dour moral posturing of superheroes.
    Daniel Drake, The New York Review of Books, 4 Jan. 2020
  • Bertie is an innocent portrayed ironically; Hank is an ironist portrayed sincerely.
    Katy Waldman, The New Yorker, 27 Apr. 2020
  • If Diski represents one model for the female ironist, Diane Johnson epitomizes another.
    Claire Messud, Harper's Magazine, 16 Mar. 2021
  • But Bono has always been helplessly earnest, even as an ironist, and whatever his intentions, on Zooropa his celebration of the victories of capitalism and technological innovation sounded sincere.
    Jonathan Bradley, Billboard, 5 July 2018

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'ironist.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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