| Contradictor | n. [ L. ] A contradicter. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Contradictorily | adv. In a contradictory manner. Sharp. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Contradictoriness | n. The quality of being contradictory; opposition; inconsistency. J. Whitaker. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Contradictory | a. [ LL. contradictorius: cf. F. contradictoire. ] Schemes . . . contradictory to common sense. Addisn. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Contradictory | n.; It is common with princes to will contradictories. Bacon. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| contradictorily | (adv) in a contradictory manner, Example: he argued contradictorily |
| contradictoriness | (n) the relation that exists when opposites cannot coexist |
| contradictory | (n) two propositions are contradictories if both cannot be true (or both cannot be false) at the same time |
| contradictory | (adj) of words or propositions so related that both cannot be true and both cannot be false, Example: `perfect' and `imperfect' are contradictory terms |
| contradictory | (adj) unable to be both true at the same time, Syn. mutually exclusive |