An oxymoron (plural "oxymora" or "oxymorons") (noun) is a figure of speech that combines two normally contradictory terms (e.g. "deafening silence"). Oxymoron is a Greek term derived from oxy ("sharp") and moros ("dull"), which technically also make the word itself an oxymoron. Oxymora are a proper subset of the expressions called contradiction in terms. What distinguishes oxymora from other paradoxes and contradictions is that they are used intentionally, for rhetorical effect, and the contradiction is only apparent, as the combination of terms provides a novel expression of some concept.
The most common form of oxymoron involves an adjective–noun combination. For example, the following line from Tennyson's Idylls of the King contains two oxymora:
Sometimes, the labelling of an otherwise non-paradox expression as a perceived oxymoron is made on the basis of substituting an alternative, non-intended meaning for the meaning normally intended in the context of the expression in question. For instance, in the expression Civil war, the term civil is normally intended to mean 'between citizens of the same state'. In this sense, the expression is neither paradox nor self-contradictory. However, if one forcibly construes civil in the sense of 'non-military', the expression may become a perceived contradiction in terms. Such designations of alleged oxymora are often made with a humourous purpose.
A more subtle rhetorical maneuvre in designating an expression XY as an "oxymoron", often used for either humourous or polemical purposes, is to pick out a perceived or alleged property of objects of type Y, re-construe that property as if it were a defining criterion of Y, and then demonstrate that it is contradicted by X. For instance, if one were to claim that "honest Republican" was an oxymoron, this would imply the claim that Republicans, by definition, are dishonest. Other expressions which have been designated oxymora in such a fashion include: Microsoft Works, corporate ethics.
Both the above strategies can be seen combined in an example like "military intelligence". First, the term "intelligence" is re-construed as meaning not "information gathering" but "intellectual power"; then it is implied that military people are, by definition, not intelligent.
Humor | Linguistics | Logic | Rhetoric | Figures of speech | Semantics
Оксиморон | Oxymóron | Oxymoron | Oxymoron (Sprache) | Oxímoron | Oxymore | Oxímoron | Oximoro | Ossimoro | אוקסימורון | Oxymoron | Oksimoronas | Oximoron | Oxymoron (stijlfiguur) | Oksymoron | Оксюморон | Oxymoron | Oxymoron | Oksymoron | Självmotsägelse | Oxymoron
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Oxymoron".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world