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Definition of contrary 1 adjective from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

contrary1

adjective
 
/ˈkɒntrəri/
 
/ˈkɑːntreri/
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  1. contrary to something different from something; against something
    • Contrary to popular belief, many cats dislike milk.
    • The government has decided that the publication of the report would be ‘contrary to the public interest’.
    • Contrary to expectations and the weather forecast, we had a fine day for the experiment.
    Extra Examples
    • Contrary to popular belief, the economy is doing well.
    • Contrary to what the public was told, weapons were still being exported.
    • It seems contrary to common sense.
    • The new claim is directly contrary to what was originally stated.
    • These results run contrary to our expectations.
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryverbs
    • be
    • run
    • seem
    adverb
    • completely
    • directly
    • entirely
    preposition
    • to
    phrases
    • contrary to expectations
    • contrary to popular belief
    See full entry
  2. [only before noun] completely different in nature or direction synonym opposite
    • contrary advice/opinions/arguments
    • The contrary view is that prison provides an excellent education—in crime.
    Extra Examples
    • Despite all the contrary evidence, they still believed that the Earth was flat.
    • My own experience is completely contrary.
  3. Word OriginMiddle English: from Anglo-Norman French contrarie, from Latin contrarius, from contra ‘against’.
See contrary in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee contrary in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic English
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