Kees,

Yes, I was using the second meaning.

English contains a number of words and phrases that can mean either A
or ¬A in a context-sensitive fashion.  The verb to enjoin can, for
example, mean either 1) to require or 2) to forbid.

The Alexandrian rhetoricians wrote about  the use of such treacherous
words in ancient Greek, and I suspect that they may occur in modern
Dutch too.

--jg

On 8/14/12, ibmmain <[email protected]> wrote:
>> "All but impossible" means "very nearly impossible", "impossible
>> without very great difficulties", and the like.
>
> I see. It's almost entirely unlike .... (I couldn't resist.)
> Barbara
>
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