Janus word
English
    
    Etymology
    
From Janus, the two-faced Roman god of doorways and transitions.
Noun
    
Janus word (plural Janus words)
- A word that has two contradictory meanings; contranym.
- 1971, Richard J. Norman, Reasons for Actions: A Critique of Utilitarian Rationality, page 67:- A pro-attitude cannot be regarded as rational unless it can be justified by showing that the object of the attitude can be characterized by means of a Janus-word.
 
- 1994, Nancy Dena Goldfarb, The poetics of drowning, page 37:- The poet is caught in the contradiction of this Janus word. Both and neither speaking and/nor silent, the poet becomes the contradiction in which the title "Dichtermuth" involves him.
 
- 1996, Scott B. Noegel, Janus Parallelism in the Book of Job, page 187:- The difference between them is that in Janus parallelism, the referents of the Janus word do not contain the same root as the Janus word; in antanaclasis, the same root is repeated with a different meaning.
 
 
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