ox·y·mo·ron
[ok-si-mawr-on, -mohr-]
noun, plural ox·y·mo·ra [ok-si-mawr-uh, -mohr-uh] ox·y·mor·ons. Rhetoric .
a figure of speech by which a locution produces an incongruous,seemingly self-contradictory effect, as in “cruel kindness” or “to make haste slowly.”
Word Origin & History
oxymoron
1657, from Gk. oxymoron, noun use of neut. of oxymoros (adj.)"pointedly foolish," from oxys "sharp" (see acrid) + moros "stupid."Rhetorical figure by which contradictory terms are conjoined so as to give point to the statement or expression; the word itself is an illustration of the thing.
Example Sentences
Noun
- There the confounding oxymoron of being both rather primitive yetextremely complicated.
- The notion of patient autonomy is a contradiction and an oxymoron.
- To environmentalists, clean coal is an insulting oxymoron.
- More universal is an oxymoron, either it is universal or not.
- Makes the term health insurers an oxymoron, sickness securitiesmight be more accurate.
- Thanks for agreeing with my oxymoron, must have heard or read itsomewhere.
- Whatever its characteristics, a socialist system that closes down itsstate-owned sector risks becoming an oxymoron.
- Since an objective perspective is an oxymoron, any inquiry is inherently subjective to begin with.
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