Ironical in a sentence as an adjective

It's ironical that this news and the one on "Papers, Please" are at the top of HN at the same time.

I think he was being ironical on the meaning of the French word "fatale": fatal.

>> "A local personal cloud"> You mean a server?Yes, it was some kind of ironical use.

For those of us a bit light on the theoretical CS aspect, is this article ironical?

Is it only me that finds this ironical to be on the HN front page along with the one where Carmack laments games being only 30 fps?

I just found it ironical given Facebook's privacy record.

I thought the introductory statement is ironical, but, apparently, it is not. I don't think this article resounds well within the HN community since it is a "mainstream space" that is being criticized.

It's ironical that the top rated comment on HN for the past few hours is going against the "hacker" culture just because it's a government that's doing it?There's no need to for them to match Intel at any level.

It would be highly ironical if "international" "more global" email would lead to more nationalized islands because only local people can input those "international" email addresses.

Maybe you're trying to be ironical, but the 2nd Amendment reads "being necessary to the security of a free State"As in, "free to form militias to beat down slave rebellions"So unless you've got a problem with your slaves, not sure it's so neat.

There's always an opportunity and design cost involved with A/B testing, but it is sort of ironical that you can't be judgmental about which A/B tests to run, because if you already know which ones are going to work, why A/B test in the first place?

Ironical definitions

adjective

characterized by often poignant difference or incongruity between what is expected and what actually is; "madness, an ironic fate for such a clear thinker"; "it was ironical that the well-planned scheme failed so completely"

See also: ironic

adjective

humorously sarcastic or mocking; "dry humor"; "an ironic remark often conveys an intended meaning obliquely"; "an ironic novel"; "an ironical smile"; "with a wry Scottish wit"

See also: ironic