different between oxymoron vs tautology

oxymoron

English

Etymology

First attested in the 17th century, noun use of 5th century Latin oxym?rum (adj), neut. nom. form of oxym?rus (adj), from Ancient Greek ???????? (oxúm?ros), compound of ???? (oxús, sharp, keen, pointed) (English oxy-, as in oxygen) + ????? (m?rós, dull, stupid, foolish) (English moron (stupid person)). Literally "sharp-dull", "keen-stupid", or "pointed-foolish" – itself an oxymoron, hence autological; compare sophomore (literally wise fool), influenced by similar analysis. The compound form ???????? (oxúm?ron) is not found in the extant Ancient Greek sources.

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /?ks??m????n/
  • (US) enPR: äk-s?-môr?-än, äk-s?-môr?-än, IPA(key): /??ksi?m???n/, /?ks??m???n/

Noun

oxymoron (plural oxymorons or oxymora)

  1. (rhetoric) A figure of speech in which two words or phrases with opposing meanings are used together intentionally for effect.
    • 1996, John Sinclair, "Culture and Trade: Some Theoretical and Practical Considerations", in Emile G. McAnany, Kenton T. Wilkinson (eds.), Mass Media and Free Trade: NAFTA and the Cultural Industries, University of Texas Press
      For Theodor Adorno and his colleagues at the Frankfurt School who coined the term, "culture industry" was an oxymoron, intended to set up a critical contrast between the exploitative, repetitive mode of industrial mass production under capitalism and the associations of transformative power and aesthetico-moral transcendence that the concept of culture carried in the 1940s, when it still meant "high" culture.
  2. (loosely, sometimes proscribed) A contradiction in terms.

Usage notes

  • Historically, an oxymoron was "a paradox with a point", or "pointedly foolish: a witty saying, the more pointed from being paradoxical or seemingly absurd" at first glance. Its deliberate purpose was to underscore a point or to draw attention to a concealed point. The common vernacular use of oxymoron as simply a contradiction in terms is considered incorrect by some speakers and writers, and is perhaps best avoided in certain contexts.

Antonyms

  • pleonasm, redundancy

Derived terms

  • oxymoronic
  • oxymoronically
  • oxymoronicity
  • oxymoronicness

Related terms

Translations

See also

  • Category:English oxymorons
  • contranym

References

Further reading

  • Oxymoron on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  • Lee’s Complete Oxymoron List, with discussion of classification (archive)

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tautology

English

Etymology

From Late Latin tautologia, from Ancient Greek ?????????? (tautología) from ?????? (tautós, the same) + ????? (lógos, explanation), analyzed as tauto- +? -logy.

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /t??t?l.?.d??i/
  • (General American) IPA(key): /t??t?l.?.d??i/
  • Rhymes: -?l?d?i

Noun

tautology (countable and uncountable, plural tautologies)

  1. (uncountable) Redundant use of words, a pleonasm, an unnecessary and tedious repetition.
    It is tautology to say, "Forward Planning".
  2. (countable) An expression that features tautology.
    The expression "raze to the ground" is a tautology, since the word "raze" includes the notion "to the ground".
  3. (countable, logic, propositional logic) A statement that is true for all truth values of its propositional variables.
  4. (countable, logic, first-order logic) A statement that is true for all truth values of its Boolean atoms.

Antonyms

  • (linguistics: expression): contradiction in terms
  • (in logic): contradiction
  • (literary): oxymoron

Coordinate terms

  • (in logic): contingency, contradiction

Derived terms

Translations

See also

  • pleonasm
  • redundancy
  • Tautology on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

tautology From the web:

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  • what is tautology in english
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