July 21, 2003, 21:32
KallehIs there a word for it?
Does anyone know of a good reverse dictionary where you can find a word for something?
In another thread CJ mentioned "decapitated head", an obvious redundancy. I read about another this weekend, where a columnist called a "greedy legislator" a redundancy. This concept would be the opposite of an "oxymoron." What are other "redundancies" that you can think of?
July 22, 2003, 01:40
Richard EnglishI suggest that "decapitated head" is oxymoronic. You can only decapitate a body, surely.
Richard English
July 22, 2003, 20:28
Kallehquote:
Perhaps tautology is the word you seek?
Maybe; a tautology is a "needless" redundancy. Asa, could a tautology then be used in a word game, like "greedy legislators"? I think that would be fun, similar to oxymorons. Or are tautologies simply wordiness redundancies?
quote:
I suggest that "decapitated head" is oxymoronic
Isn't an "oxymoron" composed of
contradictory terms (e.g. like "deafening silence")? Are head and body contradictory?
What do the rest of you think?
[This message was edited by Kalleh on Tue Jul 22nd, 2003 at 20:47.]
July 23, 2003, 06:18
Richard EnglishI assumed that a "decapitated head" was a "headless head" - and that's an oxymoron.
Richard English
July 23, 2003, 21:41
KallehYes, I think you're right, Richard.
Asa, I like the tautomoran term. What are some? I started with "greedy legislators".
Shady lawyers[with apologies to Shufitz

]
July 24, 2003, 11:10
shufitzQ: How do you know when a politician is lying.
A: His lips are moving.
June 11, 2010, 22:30
zmježd If I'm not mistaken, schwarz = black and negger = blackNope, you've misanalysed it. Sort of like
an adder for
a nadder. The break comes after the -
n-:
schwarzen 'black' +
egger 'plowman'.Actually, in German an
Egge is a 'harrow', a tool you use to break up the clods further left over after a plowing. There's another famous German surname with
egger in it:
Heidegger 'heath' + 'plowman'.