Words perceived as opposites/antonyms that aren't.
Words perceived as opposites/antonyms that aren't.
Well, up/down, on/off, in/out, right/left and top/bottom are obvious opposites/antonyms. But certain words are often perceived as antonyms that aren't really antonyms.
Ask a child what the opposite of "dog" is and they will likely answer "cat". Ask them what the opposite of "salt" is and they will likely answer "pepper" or maybe "sugar".
"Dog" and "cat" aren't really opposites/antonyms just words for different mammals. But they are often perceived as such.
Ask a child what the opposite of "dog" is and they will likely answer "cat". Ask them what the opposite of "salt" is and they will likely answer "pepper" or maybe "sugar".
"Dog" and "cat" aren't really opposites/antonyms just words for different mammals. But they are often perceived as such.
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Re: Words perceived as opposites/antonyms that aren't.
Shirt(s) and pants?
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Re: Words perceived as opposites/antonyms that aren't.
As a kid, I once made scrambled eggs with the idea that salt and pepper were opposites. It did not end well.
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Re: Words perceived as opposites/antonyms that aren't.
maybe...
sun and moon
think and feel
city and country
electron and proton (or nucleus?)
elf and dwarf
There's also the video game triad of electricity, fire, and ice.
sun and moon
think and feel
city and country
electron and proton (or nucleus?)
elf and dwarf
There's also the video game triad of electricity, fire, and ice.
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Re: Words perceived as opposites/antonyms that aren't.
So these are complementary sets. In English we don't really have a natural-sounding common word for members of a complementary pair, other than "mate" perhaps. So we extend the word "opposite" to include these cases. But that's not an insight into any of these concepts, nor is it even an insight into English semantics. It's just the result of English lacking one specific word to describe itself.
Imagine a language that lacks a common word for "result," and instead extends the word "end" to describe results. In that universe, there would be a ZBB thread that goes like this:
"Hey guys, can you think of any ends that aren't really at the end? I'll go first: being happy about your day going well, even though the day isn't over. That's an 'end' alright, but it's not at the end!"
Meanwhile in another universe, the language of the ZBB stretches the word "purpose" to cover "reason:"
"Hey guys, isn't it weird that we say 'The purpose of the sky being blue is Rayleigh Scattering,' when the sky is inanimate and doesn't have any sense of purpose? How strange!"
Imagine a language that lacks a common word for "result," and instead extends the word "end" to describe results. In that universe, there would be a ZBB thread that goes like this:
"Hey guys, can you think of any ends that aren't really at the end? I'll go first: being happy about your day going well, even though the day isn't over. That's an 'end' alright, but it's not at the end!"
Meanwhile in another universe, the language of the ZBB stretches the word "purpose" to cover "reason:"
"Hey guys, isn't it weird that we say 'The purpose of the sky being blue is Rayleigh Scattering,' when the sky is inanimate and doesn't have any sense of purpose? How strange!"
I did it. I made the world's worst book review blog.
Re: Words perceived as opposites/antonyms that aren't.
Hand and foot
Finger and toe
Arm and leg
Eat and drink
Fire and water/Fire and ice
Car and truck
Rain and snow
Animal and plant
Animal and person/human (in neither the scientific nor the colloquial meaning of the word "animal" are these words opposites.)
Meat and vegetables
Door and window
Spoon and fork
Chair and table
"Man" and "woman" aren't really opposites either nor any other gender contrasting words. The opposite of "man" is "boy" and the opposite of "woman" is "girl".
"Love" and "hate" aren't actually opposites though usually taken as such, just complementary emotions. The opposite of both is "indifference".
Finger and toe
Arm and leg
Eat and drink
Fire and water/Fire and ice
Car and truck
Rain and snow
Animal and plant
Animal and person/human (in neither the scientific nor the colloquial meaning of the word "animal" are these words opposites.)
Meat and vegetables
Door and window
Spoon and fork
Chair and table
"Man" and "woman" aren't really opposites either nor any other gender contrasting words. The opposite of "man" is "boy" and the opposite of "woman" is "girl".
"Love" and "hate" aren't actually opposites though usually taken as such, just complementary emotions. The opposite of both is "indifference".
Last edited by Space60 on Tue Apr 16, 2019 2:21 pm, edited 3 times in total.
Re: Words perceived as opposites/antonyms that aren't.
Yes, this is what I was mainly curious about. As to why those sets were commonly perceived as opposites.Moose-tache wrote: ↑Tue Apr 16, 2019 4:09 am So these are complementary sets. In English we don't really have a natural-sounding common word for members of a complementary pair, other than "mate" perhaps. So we extend the word "opposite" to include these cases. But that's not an insight into any of these concepts, nor is it even an insight into English semantics. It's just the result of English lacking one specific word to describe itself.
Imagine a language that lacks a common word for "result," and instead extends the word "end" to describe results. In that universe, there would be a ZBB thread that goes like this:
"Hey guys, can you think of any ends that aren't really at the end? I'll go first: being happy about your day going well, even though the day isn't over. That's an 'end' alright, but it's not at the end!"
Meanwhile in another universe, the language of the ZBB stretches the word "purpose" to cover "reason:"
"Hey guys, isn't it weird that we say 'The purpose of the sky being blue is Rayleigh Scattering,' when the sky is inanimate and doesn't have any sense of purpose? How strange!"
Re: Words perceived as opposites/antonyms that aren't.
I think it is an example of radial categories at work regarding the definition of "opposite" in English. BTW, for me at least, antonym is a narrower, more technical term that excludes these pseudo-opposites.Space60 wrote:Yes, this is what I was mainly curious about. As to why those sets were commonly perceived as opposites.
ìtsanso, God In The Mountain, may our names inspire the deepest feelings of fear in urkos and all his ilk, for we have saved another man from his lies! I welcome back to the feast hall kal, who will never gamble again! May the eleven gods bless him!
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Re: Words perceived as opposites/antonyms that aren't.
Conjugate.Moose-tache wrote: ↑Tue Apr 16, 2019 4:09 am So these are complementary sets. In English we don't really have a natural-sounding common word for members of a complementary pair, other than "mate" perhaps.
Horse/cow, also. Perhaps goat/sheep?
Re: Words perceived as opposites/antonyms that aren't.
Deciduous and coniferous. One means that a plant loses its leaves regularly, and the other just means it's part of a taxonomic group characterized by the production of cones. The actual antonym of deciduous is "evergreen."
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Re: Words perceived as opposites/antonyms that aren't.
Dromedary and Bactrian. Until we engineer an n+1-humped camel.
Actually, though, I don't think I've used coniferous as an antonym, but that's probably localisation. We have a higher proportion of non-pine-esque non-deciduous trees here in Australia.
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Re: Words perceived as opposites/antonyms that aren't.
"Broad-leaved (tree)" makes IMO a better conjugate for "conifer", seeing how these do not overlap; "deciduous" does, viz. larches. But I get the feeling this is not really thought of as a single concept in English. (Finnish has the somewhat succinct lehtipuu 'leaf tree' versus havupuu 'conifer'.)
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Re: Words perceived as opposites/antonyms that aren't.
Colombian Spanish: sopa y seco 'soup and dry (food)'. Refers to soup accompanied by meat and/or rice in a separate plate.
Ancient Chinese: mountains and rivers (山川, 江山).
Ancient Chinese: the gods of earth and the gods of grain, or their respective altars (社稷).
Chinese: firewood and water (薪水, which together mean the "salary" for one's work).
In El Salvador, Catholics and "Evangelicals" (actually Protestants).
Ancient Chinese: mountains and rivers (山川, 江山).
Ancient Chinese: the gods of earth and the gods of grain, or their respective altars (社稷).
Chinese: firewood and water (薪水, which together mean the "salary" for one's work).
In El Salvador, Catholics and "Evangelicals" (actually Protestants).
Last edited by Kuchigakatai on Fri May 10, 2019 11:38 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Words perceived as opposites/antonyms that aren't.
I just read about this in Lehmann, Alise et Martin-Berthet, Françoise, Lexicologie : sémantique, morphologie, lexicographie (Armand Colin : 2013) for my thesis.
They mention that co-hyponyms can have synonym- or antonym-like relationship to each other, like 'buy' and 'steal' that are both subsets of 'procure'.
They mention that co-hyponyms can have synonym- or antonym-like relationship to each other, like 'buy' and 'steal' that are both subsets of 'procure'.
Re: Words perceived as opposites/antonyms that aren't.
Or, going even more pedantic, conifers are a subtype of Gymnosperm ("naked seeds", referring to the fact that their seeds are not enclosed within an ovary), also including ginkoes, cycads and gnetophytes (comprising the three geni Gnetum, Welwitschia and Ephedra). These are usually with the only other group of plants with seeds, or spermophytes: angiosperms, the flowering plants.
so it should be conifers vs woody angiosperms
so it should be conifers vs woody angiosperms
ìtsanso, God In The Mountain, may our names inspire the deepest feelings of fear in urkos and all his ilk, for we have saved another man from his lies! I welcome back to the feast hall kal, who will never gamble again! May the eleven gods bless him!
kårroť
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Re: Words perceived as opposites/antonyms that aren't.
This is only tangentially related to this thread, but you guys might find it interesting anyway: what a neural network thinks is the opposite of a given category.
(if you're curious about how the neural network works in the first place, which gives some useful context to the above post, here's an explanation)
(if you're curious about how the neural network works in the first place, which gives some useful context to the above post, here's an explanation)
Re: Words perceived as opposites/antonyms that aren't.
In topology, an "open set" seems like the opposite of a "closed set". There is the name, of course; plus, the complement of an open set is a closed set (and vice versa). But, in fact, most sets are neither open nor closed; it's even possible to be both.
There are lots of similar examples in maths and science:
- "increasing function" and "decreasing function" (most functions are neither)
- "odd function" and "even function" (ditto)
- In thermodynamics, "intensive property" and "extensive property"
- etc.
There are lots of similar examples in maths and science:
- "increasing function" and "decreasing function" (most functions are neither)
- "odd function" and "even function" (ditto)
- In thermodynamics, "intensive property" and "extensive property"
- etc.
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Re: Words perceived as opposites/antonyms that aren't.
Oh, I can think of some fun ones involving languages.
Mandarin vs. Cantonese (for what's spoken in North America's Chinatowns)
Chinese vs. Japanese (for crazy logographies still used)
Japanese vs. Korean (regarding media products people care about outside East Asia... maybe I should rename this "anime" vs. "k-pop")
Egyptian vs. Sumerian (if both old-ass languages and the Bronze Age are your thing...)
Hebrew vs. Arabic (when beginning to learn or learn about Semitic languages)
Arabic vs. Persian (it was quite the struggle at the beginning of the last millenium)
Old French vs. Old Occitan (for cultural prestige among medieval Romance languages)
Latin vs. Greek (in the Roman Empire)
Quechua vs. Aymara
Spanish vs. French (when beginning to learn or learn about Romance languages)
Spanish vs. Portuguese (when talking about South America)
French vs. German (in the European Union)
English vs. French (for domination as the world's lingua franca... hey, French was somewhat of a plausible option before the World Wars)
Mandarin vs. Cantonese (for what's spoken in North America's Chinatowns)
Chinese vs. Japanese (for crazy logographies still used)
Japanese vs. Korean (regarding media products people care about outside East Asia... maybe I should rename this "anime" vs. "k-pop")
Egyptian vs. Sumerian (if both old-ass languages and the Bronze Age are your thing...)
Hebrew vs. Arabic (when beginning to learn or learn about Semitic languages)
Arabic vs. Persian (it was quite the struggle at the beginning of the last millenium)
Old French vs. Old Occitan (for cultural prestige among medieval Romance languages)
Latin vs. Greek (in the Roman Empire)
Quechua vs. Aymara
Spanish vs. French (when beginning to learn or learn about Romance languages)
Spanish vs. Portuguese (when talking about South America)
French vs. German (in the European Union)
English vs. French (for domination as the world's lingua franca... hey, French was somewhat of a plausible option before the World Wars)