Tuesday, May 26, 2026

DEFINITIVE OXYMORONS

 

Are you, like me, tickled by oxymorons?

Oxymoron: a figure of speech in which apparently contradictory terms appear in conjunction.


 

There are a few more of the long-used oxymorons we no longer feel, even as a hint of a tickle:


Same difference

Old news

Only choice

Adult children

Open secret

Working vacation

Minor crisis

 

The very title of this post has a tinge of oxymoronic flavor.

"Oxymoron" is itself an oxymoron because its Greek roots combine "oxys" (sharp) and "mōros" (dull), meaning "sharply dull" or "pointed foolishness". This wordplay is a fitting example of its own definition, which describes a figure of speech that pairs contradictory terms to create a new, more nuanced meaning. 

 

Oxymorons are effective in fiction only if they are newly minted. Those are jarring in the way oxymorons are meant to be. The above listed have been around for so long that they no longer evoke that space between two opposites, and wake up the sense of questioning our grasp on reality.


4 comments:

  1. I love puns and oxymorons are such fun. My husband always said that the "good rejection" was one.

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  2. Ha ha, good rejection, Vijaya. Only creatives get that. Good post, Mirka.

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  3. Playing with words is seriously fun. ;-)

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  4. Fun post, Mirka. Thank you. One of those oxymorons I see around is "very unique." Something is either unique or not unique. It doesn't come in gradations.

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