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(also known as complementary antonyms, contradictory terms & ungradable opposites) These are pairs of antonyms in the case of which the truth of one word in the pair implies the falsity of the other and similarly the falsity of one implies the truth of the other. Being "not X" automatically means being "Y" and being "not Y" means being "X". John is married implies John is not single. Similarly, John is not married implies John is single. If one is alive he can't be dead, or vise versa, and similarly: if one is married he (or she) can't be single. There is no choice between the two opposites or extremes. Binary Opposites have a relationship where there is no middle ground or scale that is involved between the two words. There are only two possibilities, either one or the other. Examples are alive and dead: you are either alive or dead, not somewhere in-between. To sum up, Binary antonymy is a relation in which two members of a pair of antonyms: (a) are mutually exclusive: not alive is dead and not dead is alive. (b) are exhaustive in the sense that these pairs can't both be false. (c) cannot be used in a comparative or superlative sense: *He is more single/more married than his brother. (d) cannot be used in questions with how to ask about degrees: *How single/How married is he? On and off are binary antonyms: an electric light or a radio or a television set is either on or off; there is no middle ground.
Two members of a pair of relational antonyms display symmetry in their meaning. If Mr. Brown is Jacks employer, then Jack is Mr. Browns employee; if Jenny is thinner than Mary, then Mary is fatter than Jenny; if John bought a car from Fred, then Fred sold a car to John; etc. Relational antonyms belong to various word classes: Verbs: buy--sell, give--receive, lend--borrow, import-export, own--belong t o, etc. Nouns: employer--employee, grandparent--grandchild, father/mother-son/daughter, parent--child, professor--student, teacher--pupil, doctor-patient, landlord/landlady--tenant, husband--wife, etc. Comparative adjectives: thinner--fatter, cheaper -- more expensive, greater than--less than, etc. Prepositions: above--below, in front of--behind , over--under, before-after, north of--south of, west of--east of, etc.
Multiple Incompatibles:
The most disputed category of the four types of antonymy is called "multiple incompatibles" (Lyons 1977). Multiple Incompatibles include, for example, the closed set of the seasons of the year, in which winter is incompatible with summer, fall and spring. Like gradable opposites, which the truth of one word in the pair implies the falsity of the other, but the falsity of one does not necessarily imply the truth of the other. Antonyms like liquid and solid, for example, are taken from the system of physical state, gas being the remaining term of the three-term system. The quantum of opposition here is not as strong as it is in the case of binary opposites. Some linguists do not consider such opposites at all.