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Antagonyms I first posted this discussion of antagonyms as a blog entry, but now it seems I have to keep it up to date. So I am posting it as a story, and will post changes as blog entries. I don't know what got into me, but I decided to try to determine what to call self-contradicting words, e.g., ravel, cleave, sanction. My wife, Cheryl, and I have enjoyed discussing such words for years. So I went to Google to find out what words have been coined to refer to such words, and it is a mess. Here are the results:
The two front runners appear to be Antagonyms and "contronyms"/"contranyms". (Amphibolous refers to a grammatical construction that can be interpreted in different ways, hence the large number. "Amphibolous words" has few hits.) So I guess I'll go with antagonyms, since there is no confusion as to spelling (i.e., zero Google hits for "antaganyms"). I recently (Christmas 2003) came across "Contradictanym" in Schott's Original Miscellany, a great collection of trivia. The Google hits all refer to his book (so far). Apparently, he has coined his own word for this category. |