n-trair-ee]
adjective, noun, plural -trar⋅ies, adverb | 1. | opposite in nature or character; diametrically or mutually opposed: contrary to fact; contrary propositions. |
| 2. | opposite in direction or position: departures in contrary directions. |
| 3. | being the opposite one of two: I will make the contrary choice. |
| 4. | unfavorable or adverse. |
| 5. | perverse; stubbornly opposed or willful. |
| 6. | something that is contrary or opposite: to prove the contrary of a statement. |
| 7. | either of two contrary things. |
| 8. | Logic. a proposition so related to another proposition that both may not be true though both may be false, as with the propositions “All judges are male” and “No judges are male.” |
| 9. | in opposition; oppositely; counter: to act contrary to one's own principles. |
| 10. | by contraries, contrary to expectation. |
| 11. | on the contrary,
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| 12. | to the contrary,
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con·trar·y (kŏn'trěr'ē) adj.
[Middle English contrarie, from Anglo-Norman, from Latin contrārius : contrā, against; see kom in Indo-European roots + -ārius, -ary.] con'trar'i·ly (kŏn'trěr-ə-lē, kŏn-trâr'-) adv., con'trar'i·ness n. |
on the contrary
It's the opposite, as in Is his shoulder hurting?
On the contrary, it's all better, or We thought you didn't like opera.
On the contrary, I love it. This phrase, at first put as by or for or in the contrary, dates from the late 1300s; on has been used since the mid-1800s.