contrary
adverb
No English definition recorded for this entry.
L188107 on Wikidata ↗noun
No English definition recorded for this entry.
L318580 on Wikidata ↗adjective
- in opposition
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ˈkɒntɹəɹi/ / /kənˈtɹɛəɹi/ / /ˈkɒntɹi/
adj
Etymology: From Middle English contrarie, compare French contraire, from Old French contraire, from Latin contrārius (“opposite, opposed, contrary”), from contrā (“against”).
- Opposite; in an opposite direction; in opposition; adverse.
“contrary winds”
“And if ye walk contrary unto me, and will not hearken unto me[…]”
- Opposed; contradictory; inconsistent.
“Galileo [Galilei]'s zeal for his opinions soon led him again to bring the question under the notice of the Pope, and the result was a declaration of the Inquisition that the doctrine of the earth's motion appeared to be contrary to the sacred scripture.”
- Given to opposition; perverse; wayward.
“a contrary disposition; a contrary child”
adv
Etymology: From Middle English contrarie, compare French contraire, from Old French contraire, from Latin contrārius (“opposite, opposed, contrary”), from contrā (“against”).
- Contrarily
“I never act contrary to my principles.”
noun
Etymology: From Middle English contrarie, compare French contraire, from Old French contraire, from Latin contrārius (“opposite, opposed, contrary”), from contrā (“against”).
- The opposite.
“No contraries hold more antipathy Than I and such a knave.”
- One of a pair of propositions that cannot both be simultaneously true, though they may both be false.
“If two universals differ in quality, they are contraries; as, every vine is a tree; no vine is a tree. These can never be both true together; but they may be both false.”
- A type of loaded die.
verb
Etymology: From Middle English contrarie, compare French contraire, from Old French contraire, from Latin contrārius (“opposite, opposed, contrary”), from contrā (“against”).
- To oppose; to frustrate.
“You that be of the court, & eſpecially ye ſworn chaplains beware of a leſſon that a great man taught me at my firſt coming to the court he told me for a good will, he thoughte it wel. He ſayd vnto me. You muſt beware how ſo euer ye do that ye cõtrary not the king, let him haue his ſaiyngs, folow him, go with him. Mary out vpon this counſel, ſhal I ſay, as he ſayes?”
“The Athenians having left the enemie in their owne land, for to pass into Sicilie, had very ill successe, and were much contraried by fortune[…].”
- To impugn.
- To contradict (someone or something).
“thus wilfully sir Palomydes dyd bataille with yow & as for hym sir I was not gretely aferd but I dred fore laūcelot that knew yow not Madame said Palomydes ye maye saye what so ye wyll I maye not contrary yow but by my knyghthode I knewe not sir Tristram”
“I finde them everie one in his turne to have reason, although they contrary one another.”
- To do the opposite of (someone or something).
- To act inconsistently or perversely; to act in opposition to.
- To argue; to debate; to uphold an opposite opinion.
- To be self-contradictory; to become reversed.