opposite
/ŏp′ə-zĭt/
adjective
- Placed or located directly across from something else or from each other. opposite sides of a building.
- Facing the other way; moving or tending away from each other. opposite directions.
- Being the other of two complementary or mutually exclusive things. the opposite sex; an opposite role to the lead in the play.
word with opposite meaning to a given word
Factsheet
antónimo
antonyme
antónimo
antonyme
meaning - What does "opposite" mean? - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
is there a general definition for what an opposite is?
Words or phrases that eventually took on the opposite meaning over time?
Nimrod. Great hunter from the Bible. Now refers to someone inadequate. I believe it is because of a Bugs Bunny episode where Bugs calls Elmer Fudd Nimrod. The sarcasm went over peoples' heads.
More on reddit.comWhat do they mean when they say, box OPPOSITE gasly? what does OPPOSITE mean?!
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This question on Linguistics Stack Exchange addresses this, asking if mother and father are true antonyms. I'll quote the accepted answer, written by robert, which basically boils down to "Technically no, but sometimes yes."
Mother is not the antonym of father. They are co-hyponyms because they are both a kind of parent - and parent is the hypernym of mother and father.
Antonymy is the relation that holds between parent and child. So by extension the antonym of mother could be said to be child.
EDIT: After reading hippietrail's answer, I somewhat changed my opinion. If one considers two words to be antonyms already if just one of their semantic features is replaced with the opposite then mother (female parent) and father (male parent) can be said to be antonyms. However, I feel that it might make sense to reserve antonymy for complete negation or oppositeness, and describe the relation between mother and father as hyponymy.
One thing to keep in mind is that language textbooks are often geared toward students who are at a very basic level of that language. For someone who is just beginning to learning English, framing words like mother and father or son and daughter as opposites is a simplification that helps students learn the proper use of those terms. In a simplified way, it makes sense: a mother is a parent who is not a father, and a father is a parent who is not a mother; a son is a child who is not a daughter, and a daughter is a child who is not a son.
This simplification serves the same purpose as the simplification often taught to children just beginning to learn division that even numbers can be divided by two and odd numbers can't. Later on, when they're more advanced, the students will learn that odd numbers can be divided by two; it's just that doing so doesn't result in a whole number. At a more advanced stage, students will learn that words like father and mother aren't true opposites like hot and cold are, but at the moment, that terminology suffices.
After some thinking [and the antonyms reference given by user Nicole helped a lot; user Hippietrail seems to support my thinking and has clarified a lot of things], I feel I can chip in with my own perspective on this question.
Antonymy : The semantic relation that holds between two words that can (in a given context) express opposite meanings [From WordWeb, emphasis mine]
Seems to be a good Definition, but this question is not about Antonyms, rather about what "opposite" means.
Opposite : "A word that expresses a meaning opposed to the meaning of another word, in which case the two words are antonyms of each other" & "Altogether different in nature, quality or significance" [From WordWeb, emphasis mine]
So if a word has many characteristics, then there can be many opposites, where atleast one characteristic is "negated".
Eg Father has characteristics (Male,Parent,Relative,Good,Carer,...) so opposites can be Mother (Male is negated Female) or Son (Parent is negated to Child) or Daughter (Male is negated Female & Parent is negated to Child) ...
What would be the opposite of Father in "My class teacher was like a Father who treated us like his children" ? The characteristic is "Good" and negate that to get "Bad", so "My class teacher was like a Tyrant who treated us like slaves". Of course, in general, nobody claims that the opposite of Father is Tyrant.
So I could say that "opposite" is either not really Well Defined, or any usage must state which Specific Context is being considered. User Hippietrail rightly says that "antonym" is not really a "natural" or "God given" concept that it at first seems.
It may not matter much in daily life, but in language Exams, incorrect thinking on the part of the evaluators may result in incorrect evaluations of some "correct" answers. One way out would be to ask questions like "What is the Feminine opposite of Father ?" so that the context is shown.
like, it seems pretty unarguable that friend is the opposite of enemy, but is the opposite of warm winter coat a light summer jacket or a t-shirt or both or does that question not have a TRUE answer?
A friend of mine mentioned how strange our usage of the phrase TL;DR has become. While it still literally means "too long; didn't read", it's usage has changed over time.
It used to be the case that TL;DR was a response to someone making a very long post. It was a low effort response comment of someone who felt the original post was too wordy to bother reading.
While it can still be used that way, I see it more commonly used as a phrase to preempt that response. It's more commonly used now as a replacement for the phrase "To summarize", where the OP says TL;DR before rephrasing their lengthy post.
Are there other possible examples of this happening with other phrases or words? This seems to be a very unique case that only exists now because of the very new ways we can communicate, what with the internet being so readily available, our attention spans being easily distractable: our information needs to be easily and quickly digestible.
Trying to search for this only really leads to auto-antonyms are kind of a similar nature.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auto-antonym#Examples_of_English-language_auto-antonyms
But none of these examples as far as I can tell, took an opposite meaning because of the way they were originally used (or at least it's not clear how the terms got their opposite meaning).
I guess maybe a more similar example is how the modern usage of Nimrod has changed to mean a dumb person. The opposite meaning becomes the common one due to people using it ironically. There will most likely be young internet kids who grow up thinking TL;DR literally means "To summarize", not realizing that it actually meant the opposite "needs to be summarized".