antiphrasis (an-TIF-ruh-sis) noun

   The humorous or ironic use of a word or a phrase in a sense opposite
   of its usual meaning. For example:
   "Brutus is an honorable man." -Antony in Julius Caesar (Shakespeare)

[From Late Latin, from Greek antiphrazein (to express by the opposite),
from anti- + phrazein (to speak).]

Today's word in Visual Thesaurus: http://visualthesaurus.com/?w1=antiphrasis

  "He was murmuring something between lips decorated by a little mustache,
   which gave a sarcastic touch to his clerk-like expression, a mustache
   folded over his mouth like an antiphrasis, which tinged whatever he said
   with maliciousness, no matter how solemn it was."
   Edoardo Albinati & John Satriano; Story Written on a Motorcycle;
   Antioch Review (Yellow Springs, Ohio); Summer 1992.

  "Perhaps Charles McGrath, in The New Yorker, sums up the ambivalence most
   eloquently. 'How good are these books really?' he asks, and answers: not
   so good--although he does so in the more flattering antiphrasis of 'good
   enough that you wish they were even better.'"
   Neil Gordon; The Admiral; Village Voice (New York); Jun 6, 1995.

This week's theme: words about wordplay.

............................................................................
A kiss can be a comma, a question mark or an exclamation point.
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Pronunciation:
http://wordsmith.org/words/antiphrasis.wav
http://wordsmith.org/words/antiphrasis.ram

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