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oxymoron
[ok-si-mawr-on, -mohr-]
noun
plural
oxymora, oxymoronsa figure of speech by which a locution produces an incongruous, seemingly self-contradictory effect, as in “cruel kindness” or “to make haste slowly.”
oxymoron
/ ˌɒksɪˈmɔːrɒn /
noun
rhetoric an epigrammatic effect, by which contradictory terms are used in conjunction
living death
fiend angelical
oxymoron
A rhetorical device in which two seemingly contradictory words are used together for effect: “She is just a poor little rich girl.”
Other Word Forms
- oxymoronic adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of oxymoron1
Example Sentences
But as David Nasaw’s “The Wounded Generation” makes emphatically clear, a good war is an oxymoron.
When four top film studio musicians formed the Hollywood String Quartet in the late 1930s, its name was presumed an oxymoron.
Affordable housing is increasingly an oxymoron and a cruel joke.
Hell, he got Tulsi Gabbard confirmed by the Senate as the Director of National Intelligence – and most Democrats thought uttering her name and the word “intelligence” in a sentence was an oxymoron.
“The phrase ‘homeless veteran’ should be an American oxymoron,” the complaint said.
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