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polar opposition

noun

Linguistics.
  1. the relation between a pair of antonyms that denote relatively higher and lower degrees of a quality with respect to an explicit or implicit norm rather than absolute values, as the relation between tall and short or light and dark, but not between true and false.


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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

There was never any doubt that one or other of these films would win best picture, and the two movies readily lent themselves to polar opposition.

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Next door, Idaho presents a polar opposition to Oregon.

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But even that polar opposition reflects a certain parallelism: These movies both reflect the strengths and limitations of American indie cinema in the age of the Great Television Conquest.

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No; it was a faculty in polar opposition to the true faculty of conversation.

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Being convinced by his opponent—i. e., convinced that his opponent's view is the right one—how can he retain his own original opinion, which by the supposition is in polar opposition.

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