A medley of oxymorons, contradictions, and double-standards. |
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If these terms sound like oxymorons, that's because they are. |
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In the annals of oxymorons, this has to be among the most oxymoronic. |
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Another triumph for military intelligence, the finest of all oxymorons. |
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Some people who have spoken on this issue have talked about the greatest oxymorons of the 20th century: bombing for peace, humanitarian hawks, killing to save lives. |
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The language flows well and ther are many word plays, spoonerisms and oxymorons to keep the reader engaging with the text. |
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Gay Republicans are not oxymorons, and they are not self-hating They are brave. |
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Benign neglect is one of those oxymorons, like Kenneth Galbraith's conventional wisdom, which is slipping into everyday vocabulary. |
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Considering the existence of such borderline phenomena as puns, oxymorons, zeugmas, spoonerisms, malapropisms, irony, allegory, etc. |
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Blockheads are as good at grind as they are at oxymorons, though: the band and their music are both simple and efficient, successful and sober, organized and messy. |
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For all that the global trend in cultural policy may contradict me, I do not believe that cultural managers and other oxymorons can conceive such a project. |
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But since we're dealing in oxymorons, it will come as no surprise that the House of Lancaster appears to be based on an industrial estate at Bloxwich in the West Midlands. |
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