Possible Questions:
- Ridicule
- Satirist's device
- Literary device
- Literary twist
- O. Henry specialty
- Dramatic device
- Subtle sarcasm
- Literary style
- Literary form
- Bitter humor
- Device of the wryly humorous
- Swift's forte
- Sardonic literary style
- O. Henry's specialty
- Tongue-in-cheek humor
- Swift specialty
- O. Henry device
- Humor with a twist
- Unexpected outcome
- Double-edged literary device
- Satiric twist
- Sarcasm
- O. Henry forte
- Wry twist
- Wry humor
- What air quotes sometimes indicate
- Tongue-in-cheek quality
- The fire station burned down, e.g.
- Subtle satire
- Satirist's specialty
- Sardonic writing
- Literary sarcasm
- It may be poetic
- It features a twist
- Humorous literary technique
- Ferrous
- Double-edged humor
- Dissimulation
- "Hipster Handbook" subject
- Wit of a sort
- Type of wit
- Twisted humor
- Swiftian humor
- Swift strength
- Subject of an Alanis Morissette tune
- Stinging surprise
- Slice of wry?
- Slice of wry
- Seinfeld specialty
- Satirist's tool
- Sardonic literary tactic
- Sardonic literary device
- Sardonic humor
- Often-missed humor
- O. Henry's forte
- O. Henry trademark
- O. Henry technique
- Literary technique
- Literary surprise
- Literary element
- Light sarcasm
- It may be dramatic
- Humor with a twist, perhaps
- Ferric
- Dry humor
- Dramatic __
- Certain humor
- Biting wit
- A literary incongruity
- "Seinfeld" specialty
- "Gulliver's Travels" feature
- Vonnegut device
- Twist onstage
- Twist of fate
- Twist of a sort
- Twist in a tale
- Twist in "Oliver Twist"
- Twist at the end
- Swiftian device
- Swift device
- Subtle twist
- Subtle humor
- Speaker's device
- Sophocles skill
- Socratic approach
- Socratic ___ (pretended ignorance)
- Socratic ___ (feigned ignorance in a discussion)
- Satiric wit
- Satire, perhaps
- Satire feature
- Sardonic style
- Sardonic humor, e.g.
- Sardonic form of humor
- Sarcasm, e.g.
- Sarcasm of a sort
- Quality that Alanis didn't quite hit in a hit song
- Poetic justice
- Overused humor technique
- O'Henry forte
- O. Henry's pet device
- O. Henry's favorite device
- O. Henry literary device
- O. Henry could see it in things
- Nonliteral humor
- Much-misunderstood writing
- Mockery of a sort
- Man bites dog, e.g.
- Man bites dog e.g.
- Literary technique involving incongruity
- Literary incongruity
- Literary device much used by O. Henry
- Literary device in "The Gift of the Magi"
- Like hematite
- Kind of writing
- It's not to be taken literally
- It's lost on some people
- It may feature a twist
- It may be tragic
- It can feature a twist
- Incongruousness
- Humorist's tool
- Humor not for dummies
- Hipster's sartorial tool
- Hidden humor
- Gentle sarcasm
- Forte of O. Henry
- Form of sarcasm, e.g.
- Ferruginous
- Feature of many fables
- Employment agency layoff, e.g.
- Double-edged plot device
- Dissimulation of a sort
- Device commonly used in "The Twilight Zone"
- Common literary device
- Certain literary device
- Asteism
- Apt twist of fate, in literature
- Adolph Coors III's allergy to beer, e.g.
- A fire station burning down, e.g.
- "The Wizard of Oz" device
- "The Twilight Zone" plot device
- "The Gift of the Magi" quality
- "The Gift of the Magi" feature
- "The gaiety of reflection and the joy of wisdom," per Anatole France
- "Oedipus Rex" literary device