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adjective

contrary

KONT-ruh-ree
adjective
1
Completely opposite in nature or direction.
"Contrary to expectations, the team won easily."
"The evidence points to a contrary conclusion."
2
Stubbornly inclined to disagree or do the opposite of what's expected.
"The toddler was being contrary, refusing everything she was offered."
noun
1
The opposite of something already stated.
"He claimed innocence, and nothing proved to the contrary."

How to Use Contrary

Learner’s notes

In plain EnglishOpposite or opposed — or, describing a person, stubbornly awkward.

Common pairings
on the contrary contrary to popular belief contrary opinion

Word Forms

more contrary comparative, more contrary comparative, contraried past tense, contraries plural, contraries singular, most contrary superlative, most contrary superlative

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_____ to expectations, the team won easily.

Etymology

From Old French contraire, from Latin contrarius ("opposite, opposed"), from contra ("against").

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Rhymes for contrary

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Definitions: FreeDict original editorial