| paradoxical |
by fully actualizing what one is at any current moment, one becomes what one is not "People change when they give up trying or struggling to be what they would like to become; when they allow themselves to be currently what they are now at this moment in time; and when they become fully aware of who or what that is. ...
Ãâó: www.g-gej.org/7-1/q-z.html
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| paradoxical respiration |
Reversed thorax movement breathing in and out due to chest injury (rip fractures) or blocked airways, ie when the patient breathes air in the thorax does not expand but caves in and vice versa. [top]
Ãâó: www.alber.co.uk/new/medical/animax/terminology.asp
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| paradox |
a contradiction, beyond the contradiction in terms that is an oxymoron. "We fucked until we were virgins." While this seems quite paradoxical, the reader may figure out that what is meant is that the parties exhausted their sexual desire and then related to each other as innocents would.
Ãâó: www.io.com/~eighner/books/lavender_blue/glossary.h...
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| paradox |
A paradox is a statement which contains apparently opposing or incongrous elements which, when read together, turn out to make sense. Emily Dickinson's poem "My Life Closed Twice Before its Close" contains a paradox in both the title and the first line. She says:
Ãâó: theliterarylink.com/definitions.html
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| paradox |
A statement that seems contradictory but may actually be true, as "Slow and steady wins the race."
Ãâó: oneonta.k12.ny.us/hs/murphy/terms.htm
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