Contradict - meaning and definition. What is Contradict
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What (who) is Contradict - definition

LOGICAL INCOMPATIBILITY BETWEEN TWO OR MORE PROPOSITIONS
Contradictions; Antilogy; Contradictory; Contradict; Contradiction (logic); Pragmatic contradiction; False tautology; Contradicted; Always false logic
  • Aristotelian logic]].

contradict         
(contradicts, contradicting, contradicted)
1.
If you contradict someone, you say that what they have just said is wrong, or suggest that it is wrong by saying something different.
She dared not contradict him...
His comments appeared to contradict remarks made earlier in the day by the chairman...
He often talks in circles, frequently contradicting himself and often ends up saying nothing.
VERB: V n, V n, V pron-refl
2.
If one statement or piece of evidence contradicts another, the first one makes the second one appear to be wrong.
The result seems to contradict a major U.S. study reported last November.
VERB: V n
contradict         
v. a.
1.
Deny, gainsay, dispute, controvert, impugn, traverse.
2.
Oppose, contravene, counteract, annul, abrogate, traverse, thwart, be contrary to, run counter to.
Contradict         
·vt To be contrary to; to Oppose; to Resist.
II. Contradict ·vi To oppose in words; to Gainsay; to deny, or assert the contrary of, something.
III. Contradict ·vt To assert the contrary of; to oppose in words; to take issue with; to Gainsay; to deny the truth of, as of a statement or a speaker; to Impugn.

Wikipedia

Contradiction

In traditional logic, a contradiction occurs when a proposition conflicts either with itself or established fact. It is often used as a tool to detect disingenuous beliefs and bias. Illustrating a general tendency in applied logic, Aristotle's law of noncontradiction states that "It is impossible that the same thing can at the same time both belong and not belong to the same object and in the same respect."

In modern formal logic and type theory, the term is mainly used instead for a single proposition, often denoted by the falsum symbol {\displaystyle \bot } ; a proposition is a contradiction if false can be derived from it, using the rules of the logic. It is a proposition that is unconditionally false (i.e., a self-contradictory proposition). This can be generalized to a collection of propositions, which is then said to "contain" a contradiction.

Examples of use of Contradict
1. These people deliberately contradict his express wishes.
2. This would contradict tradition and the Constitution.
3. "I‘m certainly not going to contradict Secretary Rumsfeld," Snow said.
4. "The FBI director didn‘t contradict the testimony," Snow said.
5. That would seem to contradict his threats of vengeance.