contrary
[ kon-trer-ee; for 5 also kuhn-trair-ee ]
/ ˈkɒn trɛr i; for 5 also kənˈtrɛər i /
adjective
noun, plural con·trar·ies.
adverb
in opposition; oppositely; counter: to act contrary to one's own principles.
Idioms for contrary
Origin of contrary
SYNONYMS FOR contrary
ANTONYMS FOR contrary
4
favorable.
synonym study for contrary
1. See
opposite.
4.
Contrary,
adverse both describe something that opposes.
Contrary conveys an idea of something impersonal and objective whose opposition happens to be unfavorable:
contrary winds.
Adverse suggests something more personally unfriendly or even hostile; it emphasizes the idea of the resulting misfortune to that which is opposed:
The judge rendered a decision adverse to the defendant.
OTHER WORDS FROM contrary
con·trar·i·ly [kon-trer-uh-lee, kuhn-trair-] /ˈkɒn trɛr ə li, kənˈtrɛər-/, adverb con·trar·i·ness, noun qua·si-con·trar·i·ly, adverb qua·si-con·trar·y, adjectiveWords nearby contrary
Example sentences from the Web for contrarily
British Dictionary definitions for contrarily (1 of 2)
contrarily
adverb
(kənˈtrɛərɪlɪ)
in a perverse or obstinate manner
(ˈkɒntrərɪlɪ)
on the other hand; from the opposite point of view
(ˈkɒntrərɪlɪ)
in an opposite, adverse, or unexpected way
British Dictionary definitions for contrarily (2 of 2)
contrary
/ (ˈkɒntrərɪ) /
adjective
noun plural -ries
adverb (usually foll by to)
in an opposite or unexpected way
contrary to usual belief
in conflict (with) or contravention (of)
contrary to nature
Derived forms of contrary
contrariness, nounWord Origin for contrary
C14: from Latin
contrārius opposite, from
contrā against
Idioms and Phrases with contrarily
contrary
see on the contrary; to the contrary.