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Contradictory

Literally every, fucking definition on this site.
You: Bloody hell, that definition on Apple said child labour but when you clicked on the word it said it, was, good. The definition painted child labour in a bad way but the first said it in a good way. That’s contradictory.
by HKisNOTaCOUNTRY. March 31, 2025
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Contrafiction

n. When your interlocutor tells you a lie *so* bad that it contradicts something else they just said.
Katie: "So Robby told me a contrafiction about how he got a flat on his way to work; but he doesn't even have a car."
by anonymous February 17, 2026
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The counterpart to expansionary thermodynamics, studying energy behavior in systems undergoing contraction—gravitational collapse, cooling and shrinking, implosions, or any process where volume decreases. In such systems, energy may appear to concentrate, temperatures rise, and entropy dynamics reverse locally. Black holes are a prime example: as matter collapses, gravitational energy transforms into heat, and the system's behavior defies the expectations of classical stationary thermodynamics. Contractionary thermodynamics explores how contraction affects work extraction, entropy production, and the arrow of time. It suggests that just as expansion breaks time-translation symmetry, contraction does too, but with opposite effects.
Example: "The star collapsed into a black hole, and contractionary thermodynamics explained how energy that seemed lost during expansion was now concentrated into a singularity—a reversal of cosmic energy flow."
by Abzugal March 22, 2026
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Contractive Thermodynamics

A broader framework encompassing contractionary thermodynamics and extending to any system undergoing contraction—whether physical, biological, economic, or social. Contractive thermodynamics studies how energy, entropy, and order behave when boundaries shrink, when systems consolidate, when volumes decrease. It applies to star formation, to organisms shrinking under stress, to economic recessions, to cultural retrenchment. The key insight is that contraction concentrates energy, increases local order at the expense of external disorder, and can reverse classical entropy gradients. Contractive thermodynamics reveals that contraction is not simply expansion reversed but has its own distinct principles.
Example: "During the recession, capital concentrated in fewer hands, and contractive thermodynamics became a lens: the economy was contracting, and with it came new dynamics of power, energy flow, and resource distribution."
by Abzugal March 22, 2026
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contrasaxonism

Pronunciation: /kɒntrəˈseɪksənɪzəm/

Definition:

A cultural, ideological, or linguistic movement that aspires to counterbalance, moderate, or replace predominant Saxon (or broader Germanic) influences with alternative traditions, languages, or customs.

The active promotion of non-Germanic cultural elements in a society otherwise dominated by Germanic heritage.

A philosophy advocating for a diverse linguistic and cultural ecosystem, where Germanic influences are tempered by other equally significant traditions.

The principle of preserving cultural equilibrium by mitigating excessive reliance on Germanic norms.
Etymology:
From Latin "contra" (against) and Saxon (Germanic tribes).

Significance:
• It defines resistance to monolithic cultural dominance.
• It emphasizes inclusivity and diversity.
• It identifies efforts to restore balance in cultural and linguistic landscapes.
• It avoids polarizing extremes.
• It simplifies complex sociocultural dynamics.
• It improves understanding of multicultural interactions.
• It replaces Scandinavian-Germanic, Non-American, foreign, and Anglo-Saxon terms.
Singular Noun: Contrasaxonism
Plural Noun: Contrasaxonisms
Examples:
• Academics advocate contrasaxonism to preserve minority languages.
Architects promote contrasaxonism by designing eclectic urban landscapes.
Historians champion contrasaxonism to acknowledge forgotten cultural legacies.
• Literary critics argue for contrasaxonism to celebrate polyphony in literature.
• Musicians compose music reflecting contrasaxonist ideologies.
by Dmitrio July 22, 2025
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contrahalism

Pronunciation: /ˈkɒntrə.heɪ.lɪ.zəm/
Definition:

1. A linguistic movement or ideology that opposes the use of sibilant terms with the prefix "SH-", advocating for linguistic liberty from these constraints.

2. The systematic rejection of "SH-" prefixes promotes clarity and inclusivity.

3. A belief that advocates alternative linguistic forms, avoiding sibilant prefixes jointly.

4. The practice of replacing "SH-" prefixed words with non-sibilant alternatives.

Significance:
• It defines resistance to sibilant linguistic norms.
• It emphasizes inclusivity and linguistic flexibility.
• It identifies efforts to remove restrictive phonetic patterns.
• It avoids divisive linguistic policies.
• It simplifies complex linguistic debates.
• It improves comprehension of linguistic independence.
• It replaces Scandinavian-Germanic, Non-American, foreign, and Anglo-Saxon terms, similar to "SH- phonetic libertarianism."
Singular Noun: contrahalism
Plural Noun: contrahalisms
Examples:
• Advocates of contrahalism recommend replacing "shoulder" with "collarbone."
• Teachers introduced contrahalism to encourage diverse language use.
• Publications adopted contrahalism in their editorial guidelines.
Linguists studied contrahalism in comparative language analysis.
• Legislatures discussed contrahalism in policymaking.
by Dmitrio July 24, 2025
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