Talk:Auto-antonym

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Note that the most popular search result on Google for contronyms [1] lists words that are only marginally contronyms and shouldn't be included in this list. It will be better to keep this list pure.

Anyone else think the list of contronyms should go to wictionary instead of wikipedia? --65.27.70.55 22:08, 20 Dec 2004 (UTC)

Since when can inflammable mean not flammable? KorbenDirewolf 07:48, 9 Feb 2005 (UTC)

Contents

[edit] Another contranym

I think "meek" is also a contranym.

Merriam-Webster defines it as: 1 : enduring injury with patience and without resentment 2 : deficient in spirit and courage

I would say that enduring injury with patience and without resentment takes enormous courage and spirit. This may be POV but I think it is still worth mentioning. What do you folks think?

--Cfwschmidt 01:56, 4 November 2005 (UTC)

Although Merriam-Webster is a single reliable source, there are many uses for the word "meek". Essentially, meek means to be mild; enduring insult or injury without objection; seeming to accept wrongs, poor treatment or bad luck without complaint.

The contrast between "courage", and "meek" changes within culture and time. An example would be Ghandi in the 1940's in India. Another could be straight out of fiction with Superman and Clark Kent; they really are one, but Clark Kent SEEMS to lack courage, so that the culture he exists in will not suppose he is the superhero associated with courageous action. Seeming doesn't make it so. Meek need not be a deficiency in either spirit or courage, but just part of the way courage (taking action against wrong while being afraid) manifests.


I'm looking for a verification that the word blue blongs on this page.

1. adj. Strict moral code. (eg: Blue Laws)

2. adj. Pornography, foul language, etc. (ie: blue films, blue joke)

note: infalmmable should be removed or edited to explain why it's is not an acronym of itself. (See Usage Note)

Interesting what we can discover by putting our minds together. The suggestions above are impressive and tantalisingly close (at least) to qualifying as contronyms. Here is another I just thought of: oversight, as in 1) He has the oversight for the family taxes (=responsibility for). 2) He neglected to do the taxes. It was an oversight (=failed in responsibility, due to losing from view). Comments?

--Philopedia 13:31, 7 December 2006 (UTC)

I think passion is close, in a way, though I realize there is not a strict antithetical relationship. A passion for life is a full embrace of the beauty and goodness of life, but passion means to suffer with, which is in the ballpark of an opposite meaning. MotherFunctor 00:54, 10 September 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Trivial?

What about trivial? It can either be dismissable, unimportant, but in a more formal or mathematical context it can be essential to, for instance, a recursive function's definition... Wouter Lievens

Hi Wouters, I studied mathematics, but just at the moment, I can't place your reference for a mathematical use of trival. How about an example? Thanks --Philopedia 13:33, 7 December 2006 (UTC)

In mathematics trivial is usually used to either mean obvious, the proof is trivial, or meeting a definition trivially, but of little interest or consequence, as in the trivial group is a group with one element, the trivial topology is the set {X,{}}. It's meaning is very close to our common usage of trivial. MotherFunctor 00:54, 10 September 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Contronym vs. Auto-Antonym

I propose that the name of this entry be changed to "Contronym" in order to reflect the most commonly used spelling of this language game.

The word contronym was coined in 1962 by Jack Herring for a language game. Contronyms were the subject of an article by Richard Lederer in Word Ways in February 1978. David Morice coined the word pseudo-contronym in 1987 for a similar language game.

  • contronym — a word which can be used in two contradictory senses: a language game. Compare antagonym, autantonym, heteronym, and homonym. See also pseudo-contronym. [Herring; Lederer/1]
  • pseudo-contronym — a word which, when modified, can be used in two contradictory senses (e.g., unit = one thing; but un-it = not a thing): a language game — coined by David Morice. See also contronym. [Morice]

References

  • Herring, Jack. Word Study (February 1962).
  • Lederer/1 = Lederer, Richard. "Curious Contronyms." Word Ways, 11 (February 1978): 27-28.
  • Morice, David. "Kickshaws." Word Ways, 20 (November 1987): 243.

The word contronym is occasionally (and incorrectly) spelled "contranym"; the more historically correct spelling is contronym. The word derives from the Latin contr(a), "against, contrary, in opposition" + -onym; the suffix (nearly) always supersedes the root, so the "a" in contra is dropped to form contronym.

PlaysInPeoria 04:04, 19 January 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Auto-Antonym vs. Autantonym

The original spelling of "auto-antonym" (with or without the hypen) was autantonym. It was coined (or perhaps simply reported) by Joseph T. Shipley in 1960.

The original spelling, in which the "o" in auto- was properly dropped, was used in the Dictionary of Language Games, Puzzles, and Amusements in 1986.

  • autantonym — word having two opposite meanings (as a fast horse, and a fast color). Cf. contronym, heteronym, and homonym. [Eiss:39; Shipley:74]

References

  • Eiss, Harry Edwin. Dictionary of Language Games, Puzzles, and Amusements. New York: Greenwood Press, 1986.
  • Shipley, Joseph T. Playing with Words. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1960, p. 74.

PlaysInPeoria 04:06, 19 January 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Enantionymy? Antilogy?

What, pray tell, is "antilogy," or, for that matter, "enantionymy"?

The following sentence appears in the article: "This phenomenon is also called 'enantionymy' or 'antilogy.'" With all due respect, if this sentence adds any value to the article, which is questionable, it certainly demands a footnote.

A quick Google search revealed that the terms apparently were coined by Laurence Horn, writing in LINGUIST List. According to LINGUIST List 14.553, Mon Feb 24 2003, Sum: Contrasting senses for 'leave' (edited by Steve Moran), "He [Horn] now prefer to call this phenomenon as 'enantionymy' which he earlier termed as 'antilogy.'"

Let's stick with contronym or perhaps autantonym!

PlaysInPeoria 04:37, 19 January 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Seeking advice: names which describe (or contradict) themselves

I wonder if any of the contributors to this article can advise me on a somewhat related vocabulary curiosum - personal names which either support of contradict themselves. Does the concept sound confusing? It really oughtn't. But rather than striving for a clear and succint definition, I can get the idea across with a very examples that spring immediately to my mind:

William Wordsworth - what better name could a poet ask for?
Edgar Allen Poe - wanted to become a poet, was three quarters of the way there at birth.
Brian Cashman - in charge of player recruitment for the New York Yankees baseball team, a team (I believe) that outspends all other teams combined.
Derek Jeter - Yankee shortstop (Jeter means "to throw")

I think it would be interesting to start a Wiki page for this concept (assuming it doesn't exist already). To start with, perhaps someone could advise on what it's called. (If not yet named, I'd be tempted to call it Icononames.

--Philopedia 10:58, 11 September 2007 (UTC)

Hi Philopedia, the word you are looking for is aptronym, " a name that is aptly suited to its owner", and some of the names you are citing are already listed. Actually, it might help you to take a look at the Wiki article -onym. It gives you all the words with the suffix "-onym". Dieter Simon 23:09, 11 September 2007 (UTC)
Wonderful! Thank you. Where would I turn if I didn't have the Wiki community of well-educated oddballs like myself?
--Philopedia 15:29, 14 September 2007 (UTC)

hey there i wuv u —Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.157.128.94 (talk) 18:41, 22 October 2007 (UTC)

[edit] help

give us information now u suck —Preceding unsigned comment added by 76.122.236.226 (talk) 01:42, 23 April 2008 (UTC)