T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
118.1 | | SUPER::KENAH | | Sun Nov 24 1985 01:03 | 7 |
| Oxymorons have been discussed previously in this file (I think).
Does anyone know in what note they are discussed?
Does a Concordance for this Note file exist?
I don't understand why sensitive men is an oxymoron... am I missing something?
andrew
|
118.2 | | FOREST::ROGERS | | Mon Dec 16 1985 15:07 | 5 |
| A favorite of mine came from Bill Moran, who used to run the Module Test
Programming Group. Bill would always refer to any new project, method,
business, etc. as an "insurmountable opportunity." Really rather nice.
Larry
|
118.3 | | HBOMB4::SUTTON | | Tue Dec 17 1985 07:50 | 5 |
| Bought a new snow shovel the other day.
It's made of "lightweight, heavy plastic."
- John
|
118.4 | | HYDRA::THALLER | | Tue Dec 17 1985 09:34 | 8 |
| Oxymoron is one itself meaning sharp-foolish (greek)
How about:
Ice water
Structured programming
IBM compatable
-Capt'n Kurt[1m[5m*[0m
|
118.5 | | HANOI::SAVAGE | | Tue Dec 17 1985 14:33 | 3 |
| Does, "Contains salt, no preservatives" count as an oxymoron?
Neil
|
118.6 | | LASSIE::TORTORINO | | Fri Dec 20 1985 19:48 | 4 |
| One that's rather grim: "Fallout shelter"
And of course, "Readable documentation"
|
118.7 | Friendly argument | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | Sun Mar 02 1986 22:08 | 10 |
| Reopening old subjects department:
William Safire's column in the New York Times Magazine a couple
of months ago covered oxymorons. He pointed out that one of
the most commonly cited examples, "jumbo shrimp" is in fact
NOT an oxymoron - it just sounds like one. "Tall midget"
would be an oxymoron, but "shrimp" is the actual name of the
animal in question, and not (in this case) used descriptively.
Jumbo shrimp are properly described, since they are larger
than normal shrimp.
|
118.8 | Low-salt Saltines | SKIVT::PIPER | bill piper | Thu May 08 1986 18:06 | 0 |
118.9 | Sign seen in Newport, R.I. | HARDY::KENAH | Hammer, Tongue, Nail, Door | Mon May 19 1986 11:45 | 7 |
| Historic
White Lodge
Condominiums
andrew
|
118.10 | | COOKIE::SNYDER | Sid Snyder | Thu Jul 24 1986 20:17 | 1 |
| Justice Rehnquist
|
118.11 | phone ans machines | JAWS::AUSTIN | Tom Austin @UPO - Channels Marketing | Fri Jul 25 1986 14:33 | 2 |
| Telephone answering machines that tell the caller that the called
party isn't there right now...
|
118.12 | ...a chemist reacts... | OBLIO::SHUSTER | Red Sox Addition: 1986 = 1975 + 1 | Fri Jul 25 1986 15:37 | 21 |
| For those who like chemistry:
Just as you can break down a sentence into its components, you can break down
a compound, such as oxymoron. Just heat it sufficiently, and you get a
laughing moron.
MoRoN O --> MoRoN + NO
2 2 2
^
|
|
Is this what they call a compound sentence?
I don't remember there being an Ro in the periodic table; if not, let's call
it Robinium. I have one of those periodic tables in my kitchen, but it's a
monthly, so I don't see it very often.
-Rob
|
118.13 | Robinium | NATASH::WEIGL | breathum via turbo - ergo faster | Fri Jul 25 1986 16:48 | 4 |
|
Jeez - I've got some of that right here on my terminal stand, and
a couple of years ago, DEC sold me another lump of ROBINium for
home display......
|
118.14 | Laughing at the gas | ECCGY4::BARTA | Gabriel Barta/ESPRIT/Intl Eng/Munich | Wed Jul 30 1986 13:28 | 9 |
| Re .11: "I am not here right now ..." on a telephone-answering
machine: that's a SELF-REFERENTIAL oxymoron, or more likely a paradox.
Lots of discussion of that elsewhere. I like it.
Re .12: Very good. (But isn't laughing gas, nitrous oxide, something
like NO? I thought oxides had just one O.) (-- Someone make some
more chemical puns with this, please!)
Gabriel.
|
118.15 | chemistry | CACHE::MARSHALL | beware the fractal dragon | Wed Jul 30 1986 17:54 | 6 |
| re .14:
nitrous oxide is N O
2
sm
|
118.16 | | AKOV68::BOYAJIAN | Did I err? | Thu Jul 31 1986 04:56 | 3 |
| Nitrous oxide is always good for a laugh...
--- jerry
|
118.17 | This may be here already, but... | SERF::EPSTEIN | Contradance; no contra support | Thu Jul 31 1986 11:38 | 5 |
| Re: chemistry
Wouldn't an oxymoron be something of the form:
O=<moron>=O
|
118.18 | deliberate speed | GALLO::JMUNZER | | Fri Aug 01 1986 23:06 | 9 |
| Looking up the wonderful oxymoron "deliberate speed" (Supreme Court, 1955),
I found several in a verse by Francis Thompson:
But with unhurrying chase,
And unperturbed pace,
Deliberate speed, majestic instancy,
They beat -- and a Voice beat
More instant thn the Feet --
"All things betray thee, who betrayest Me."
|
118.19 | Back to chemistry | EVER::MCVAY | Pete McVay | Thu Aug 14 1986 09:30 | 4 |
|
There's that famous opera, "Amyl and the Nitrate Visitors"
-- Perhaps chemistry needs its own topic...
|
118.20 | One more | VINO::RWADDINGTON | | Wed Dec 31 1986 14:02 | 1 |
| Military Intelligence
|
118.21 | | INK::KALLIS | Support Hallowe'en | Mon Jan 05 1987 11:02 | 4 |
| "...was found missing." [many news stories and some police blotters.]
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
118.22 | | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | Steve | Wed Jan 28 1987 12:34 | 1 |
| "I'm from the government and I'm here to help you."
|
118.23 | automatic standard? | REGENT::MERRILL | Time flies when you're having font. | Thu Jan 29 1987 10:11 | 7 |
| From an automobile bulletin,
"... standard automatic ..."
referring to the fact that the automatic transmission is standard
equipment.
|
118.24 | y | DECWET::MITCHELL | | Tue Feb 03 1987 00:17 | 5 |
| Name of company: Consolidated General
John M.
|
118.25 | from the easy-net | REGENT::MERRILL | Time flies when you're having font. | Thu Feb 05 1987 17:50 | 4 |
| clean colon
??
|
118.26 | more | FALEK::FALEK | ex-TU58 King | Fri Mar 27 1987 19:51 | 3 |
| Software Engineer...
Happily Married...
|
118.27 | Saw this on a SMALL yellow notepad | DAMSEL::MOHN | blank space intentionally filled | Thu Apr 02 1987 12:45 | 1 |
| "Mini Legal Pad"
|
118.28 | I'm surprised no-one's mentioned the classic.... | MPGS::DOODYM | Dead Centroid | Thu Apr 02 1987 13:38 | 2 |
|
Roman Catholic
|
118.29 | | SPMFG1::CHARBONND | | Fri Apr 03 1987 08:01 | 1 |
| UNISYS :-)
|
118.30 | Another synonym/antonym | IOSG::DUTT | | Fri Apr 03 1987 08:31 | 2 |
| IMPUGN (To attack ....... to resist)
|
118.31 | I second... | ANYWAY::GORDON | Indoor Stargazer | Sat Apr 11 1987 22:53 | 8 |
| Re: < Note 118.29 by SPMFG1::CHARBONND >
> UNISYS :-)
As someone who was contracted to SDC (part of Burroughs, now
UNISYS) in a former (pre-DEC) life, I cannot agree with you more...
--Doug
|
118.32 | Somewhat bigger than a breadbox, ... | 4GL::LASHER | Working... | Sun Apr 19 1987 14:28 | 1 |
| Superette.
|
118.33 | normal Boston weather ? | REGENT::MERRILL | Glyph, and the world glyphs with you. | Tue May 05 1987 13:55 | 1 |
|
|
118.34 | | 49257::FINANCE | | Thu May 07 1987 11:55 | 6 |
| MLNOIS::HARBIG
Statement made in an internal seminar...
"It's factual but difficult to prove."
Max
|
118.35 | | KESEY::GETSINGER | Eric Getsinger | Thu May 07 1987 13:38 | 3 |
| see 147.106:
Significant modicum
|
118.36 | From the worlds most exclusive club. | SEAPEN::PHIPPS | Digital Internal Use Only | Tue May 12 1987 10:56 | 6 |
|
Senate Intelligence Committee
^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^
Hmmm... I wonder what happened to the original note!?
|
118.37 | Plumbing new depths of mediocrity! | MLNIT5::FINANCE | | Tue May 12 1987 13:28 | 5 |
| MLNOIS::HARBIG
Abyssal heights ?
Max
|
118.38 | Boneless Prime Rib | SWSNOD::RPGDOC | Dennis (the Menace) Ahern 223-5882 | Thu Jun 18 1987 14:35 | 1 |
|
|
118.39 | | INK::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Thu Jun 18 1987 15:10 | 4 |
|
...Soft rock ...
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
118.40 | A one word oxymoron? | SEAPEN::PHIPPS | Digital Internal Use Only | Thu Jun 18 1987 18:29 | 2 |
|
A-men Steve.
|
118.41 | | SQM::BUFORD | One with the Cosmic Giggle | Fri Jun 19 1987 09:50 | 6 |
| Business Ethics...
Political Science?
John B.
|
118.42 | here's my latest oxymoron. I hope you like it | VIDEO::OSMAN | type video::user$7:[osman]eric.six | Mon Jun 22 1987 12:34 | 9 |
| How about:
expert opinion
/Eric
|
118.43 | studiously ignoring | VINO::JMUNZER | | Tue Oct 20 1987 12:45 | 1 |
| John
|
118.44 | vacuum cleaner | CIMAMT::WESTERVELT | | Mon Feb 01 1988 22:57 | 1 |
|
|
118.45 | 'may I help you' ? Hah! 'Help' indeed ! | VIDEO::OSMAN | type video::user$7:[osman]eric.vt240 | Tue Feb 02 1988 22:27 | 38 |
| I was iceskating down near Pennsauken NJ, across the river from
Philadelphia, at a rink.
I needed to use the john, and I happened to accidentally
go in the wrong door, which led to a fairly nice locker room
instead of a scuzzy public restroom.
I didn't actually realize I was trespassing in the private
lockerroom of the Philadelphia Flyers hocky team.
So, not knowing I was trespassing, I felt fairly confident as I
passed a man shaving as I made my way to a toilet stall. he looked
up at me and asked
May I help you ?
As I was just entering the stall at that moment, my dry humorous
side rose to the occasion and I responded
No thanks, I can do it myself.
Well, he started making clear that I wasn't supposed to be in there.
("What I'm trying to 'convey' is that this is private property...")
Somehow I remember he used the word 'convey'.
By this time I was well-seated, and I apologized through the door.
But the oxymoron is (using a loose definition):
May I help you ?
How many times have you been asked that by someone that has absolutely
no intention of assisting you whatever. In fact they intend just
the opposite - to tell you to stop what your're doing or stop
going where you're going.
/Eric
|
118.46 | Stop? | ZYMRGY::LAMBERT | Another day, another '$ ' prompt | Wed Feb 03 1988 16:07 | 10 |
| re: .45
> ... - to tell you to stop what your're doing or stop
> going where you're going.
But you said you didn't stop... :-)
Like the old saying, "Let me help you out: Which way did you come in?"
-- Sam
|
118.47 | instead, how about | LEZAH::BOBBITT | Once upon a time... | Wed Feb 03 1988 16:58 | 14 |
| rather than "can I help you?"
when I worked at the campus food service (yecchkk) some time ago,
my two favorites were:
"what can I do you for?"
and
"it's been a business doing pleasure with you..."
both of which left people with quizzical stares (if they noticed
at all...people don't tend to listen to those waiting on them...)
-jody
|
118.48 | airless atmosphere | REGENT::EPSTEIN | Bruce Epstein | Wed Feb 03 1988 23:49 | 4 |
| Meanwhile, back to our regularly scheduled topic, already in progress...
Heard on the PBS show 'Television':
"airless atmosphere"
|
118.49 | feeling oxymoronic | WLDWST::KING | KOYAANISQATSI | Wed Apr 20 1988 18:56 | 7 |
| How 'bout:
"semi-boneless" ?
Seems to me, it either has a bone or it doesn't!
-pking
|
118.50 | maybe an okay use | MARKER::KALLIS | Why is everyone getting uptight? | Wed Apr 20 1988 19:07 | 9 |
| Re .49 (pking):
Maybe. But in the following sentence, a good case might be made
for the term.
"In order to achieve maximum flexibility, a cat's skeleton is semi-
boneless; it is quite cartiligenous."
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
118.51 | pretty ugly | POLICY::BRADLEY | Chuck Bradley | Sat Aug 06 1988 06:48 | 5 |
|
pretty ugly
a little big
|
118.52 | and then there's: | LEDS::HAMBLEN | | Fri Aug 12 1988 19:34 | 2 |
| Foreseeable future....
|
118.53 | Is this a new one? | ERIS::CONLON | An anchovy pizza, hold the pizza. | Sat Aug 13 1988 04:08 | 2 |
| Infinitely small.
|
118.54 | Disbeliever!? | SEAPEN::PHIPPS | Mike @DTN 225-4959 | Mon Aug 15 1988 19:43 | 4 |
| > Foreseeable future....
Jean Dixon is gonna get you...
|
118.55 | Equal Opportunity / Affirmative Action | TKOV52::DIAMOND | | Mon Feb 12 1990 10:08 | 0 |
118.56 | Professional Boxing | MACNAS::DKEATING | Gossip and Innuendo Columnist for News at Six | Mon Feb 12 1990 17:48 | 1 |
|
|
118.57 | enhanced reduced? | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Wed Feb 21 1990 15:31 | 6 |
|
From a recent announcement by a competitor:
Enhanced RISC
JP
|
118.58 | Junk Bonds | PAMPAM::HALDANE | Typos to the Trade | Thu Feb 22 1990 15:04 | 5 |
| In the news recently:
High risk securities...
Delia
|
118.59 | Cheesed off! | CRATE::ELLIOT | | Wed Apr 25 1990 18:50 | 6 |
| Some of the sandwiches available from the canteen at Solent Business
Park claim to contain...
...low fat cream cheese
!!!
|
118.60 | he's so pedantic, his dictionary has an index | UILA::WHORLOW | new math: 2 + 2 = 5; for large 2 | Fri Apr 27 1990 01:38 | 18 |
| G'day,
Not sure if it's been put in before, and lacking time to check, I'll do
it anyway..... ;-)
from ALL-IN-1 land
US English
and
UK British English
djw
|
118.61 | Metallic Silver | SEAPEN::PHIPPS | DTN 225.4959 | Fri Jun 22 1990 17:50 | 3 |
| From a car commercial heard on the radio this morning.
Mike
|
118.62 | Reflective Grey | KAOFS::S_BROOK | It's time for a summertime dream | Fri Jun 22 1990 19:13 | 12 |
| > -< Metallic Silver >-
>
Since silver is metallic, surely this isn't an oxymoron, but rather a figment
of the Dept. of Redundancy Dept.
But on the other foot, this sounds like the name of a car paint, where
silver is actually a shade of grey and metallic means finely flecked
with reflective material. Both words are therefore incorrect used but
while the combination sounds ridiculous, it is essentially correct.
Stuart
|
118.63 | Good Grief! | SEAPEN::PHIPPS | DTN 225.4959 | Fri Jun 22 1990 19:59 | 10 |
| You are correct about "metallic silver". (Got to take a vacation!)
It just sounded so strange at the time. Even though I had heard it
many times.
Maybe my note vs it's "oxymoron" count for something. 8^}
Is there any significance to the spelling of oxymoron? Never mind. I
don't want to start a rat-hole on top of everything else.
|
118.64 | The world could have been a different place ! | KAOFS::S_BROOK | It's time for a summertime dream | Fri Jun 22 1990 20:32 | 26 |
| Well, I like the sound of that rat hole ... I enjoy ulikely
etymologies ...
Maybe it went something like this ...
Some poor guy with a terrible tooth ache went to the dentist
but was terrified of being there, so the dentist gave him some
nitrous (laughing gas) ... now as you probably know, dentists
actually use a mixture of nitrous and oxygen.
Now, as the guy was sitting there and nitrous was taking effect,
the guy starts babbling away all kinds of nonsense including these
words that we know today as oxymorons. The more relaxed the guy became
the more gibberish he spouted, making it impossible for the dentist
to work in the guys mouth, so, to bring the guy more down to earth, he
called to his assistant to stop and turn the oxy(gen) more on.
Well, the guy in the chair thought he heard the dentist say "Stop
telling those oxymorons" and so the name for this particular type of
gibberish stuck.
Imagine, if the dentist had in fact said, "turn the nitrous down",
the title of this note could have been Nitrodowns.
(Remember the childhood joke with the punch line "He was a little more
on" ?)
|
118.65 | 'real fiction' | ANOVAX::TFOLEY | Battle of Wits = unarmed combat. | Fri Jun 22 1990 21:27 | 3 |
| As in : Now there's a piece of real fiction.
Terry
|
118.66 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | It's time for a summertime dream | Fri Jun 22 1990 22:21 | 2 |
| Ah, but did you *smile* when you read it ? If so, then it was
worth it ... if not ... oh well ... another pun-ishing folk etymology.
|
118.67 | disturbing the neighbors | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Mon Jun 25 1990 15:26 | 6 |
| > Ah, but did you *smile* when you read it ? If so, then it was
> worth it ... if not ... oh well ... another pun-ishing folk etymology.
No, but I did groan out loud. Does that count?
--bonnie
|
118.68 | less off? | MARVIN::KNOWLES | intentionally Rive Gauche | Tue Jun 26 1990 10:17 | 15 |
| .64's right about the oxy- bit. The `oxy-' in both `oxymoron' and
`oxygen' means (in Greek) bitter/acid. Oxygen is the acid-maker;
`oxymoron' is itself an oxymoron, meaning bitter-sweet.
I don't know what's sweet about morons, except maybe their nature.
This would tie in with the derivation of `cretin' - via French -
from `Christian'. But a cretin wasn't just sweet-natured: there
was a theological reason for cretins being thought saintly when
the word was first used - the theory was that morons just didn't
have the nous to be sinful, so once baptized they were guaranteed
a place in Heaven.
Oops, wrong note.
b
|
118.69 | The rathole is dead. Long live the rathole. | MARVIN::KNOWLES | intentionally Rive Gauche | Tue Jun 26 1990 12:55 | 4 |
| ps
Of course, the derivation of `moron' may have nothing to do with the
Greek.
|
118.70 | you can't close this rathole before I get in! | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Tue Jun 26 1990 16:08 | 9 |
| According to Webster, _moron_ is from _moros_, foolish or dull. I
couldn't find any mention of sweetness anywhere. _Oxy_ is not
just bitter, it's also sharp or keen. The compound _oxymoron_ is
itself a Greek rhetorical term that means "pointedly foolish."
It was imported into English in 1657, I would assume via one of
the early grammar and rhetoric instruction books.
--bonnie
|
118.71 | L'envoi | MARVIN::KNOWLES | intentionally Rive Gauche | Wed Jun 27 1990 09:57 | 5 |
| I blame it on my Greek master: he said `Read my lips, oxymoron
means bittersweet' - tho' I shan't throw out the `sweet' idea
until I see a decent Greek dictionary.
b
|
118.72 | please do | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Wed Jun 27 1990 14:51 | 4 |
| I will certainly take the word of almost any other dictionary over
the word of Mr. Webster, especially concerning word history.
--bonnie
|
118.73 | Webster dodgy? | MARVIN::KNOWLES | intentionally Rive Gauche | Thu Jun 28 1990 10:57 | 11 |
| I don't have a vast amount of respect for some reference works, but I
didn't know good ol' Noah was notably suspect.
He was right about oxy-; I was taking a bit of a short-cut, going from
the adjective `acid' (bitter/tart/pointed/acerbic/w.h.y) to the noun;
Gk "oxys" isn't a noun (tho' - like most adjectives in most inflected
languages - it _can_ be).
b
|
118.74 | sometimes misleading by omission | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Thu Jun 28 1990 16:01 | 12 |
| re: .73
Oh, the real Noah isn't, but I was using the desktop collegiate
thing, and I've founf that sometimes when it's condensing word
histories and such it leaves out important steps and alternate
meanings in the interest of being concise. So while it gives the
truth, sometimes it's a truth with holes.
Probably not fair to blame Mr. Webster for what editorial boards
do in his name, either.
--bonnie
|
118.75 | Over and out | MARVIN::KNOWLES | intentionally Rive Gauche | Tue Jul 03 1990 15:41 | 26 |
| Here's the last word from Liddell & Scott (biggest and best - possibly
sole, in English libraries - dictionary of Ancient Greek):
1 Nothing about `moros' meaning sweet
2 But `moros', which usually means foolish or dull, _can_ be applied
to taste, with the meaning `flat, insipid'
3 `oxus', an adjective (except as a noun meaning Wood Sorrel -
a bitter-leaved plant [I know, I ate a leaf once]), means
dull or foolish but can refer to bitterness of taste
4 Nothing about `oxymoron' being a ready-made Greek word
So `oxymoron' doesn't _mean_ `bittersweet', but like `bittersweet'
it can be read as referring to mutually exclusive tastes.
As for point (4), L&S may be referring strictly to Ancient Greek;
some purists, fairly recently - about 19th c. I think - tried
to protect and crystallize Ancient Greek in a form known as the
`katharevousa' [= `pure', I think, or something to do with purity].
Ironically, in their conservative zeal, they may have coined a new word.
b
b
|
118.76 | | WAGON::MAGIK::DONHAM | Nothing up my sleeve... | Mon Jul 09 1990 19:25 | 6 |
| re: .-2
Don't forget that the name Webster is in the public domain...ANY dictionary
may be called a _Webster's_. Look for the union label to be sure...
Perry
|
118.77 | | SSGBPM::KENAH | Parsifal | Mon Jul 09 1990 23:14 | 4 |
| What, specifically, constitutes the "union label" with regard to
the various Webster's?
andrew
|
118.78 | Merriam | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Pas de le Rh�ne que nous! | Tue Jul 10 1990 05:12 | 1 |
|
|
118.79 | | TKOV51::DIAMOND | This note is illegal tender. | Tue Jul 10 1990 07:57 | 6 |
| "End Rathole"
Trusted system
Skilled manager
Corporate planning
Also one that just came over the net today, "American education"
|
118.80 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Tue Jul 10 1990 20:40 | 1 |
| Soviet economy
|