It's the Word of the Day podcast for January 11th.
Today's word is paradox, spelled P-A-R-A-D-O-X.
Paradox is a noun.
It refers to something such as a situation that is made up of two opposite things,
and that seems impossible but is actually true or possible.
It can also refer to someone who does two seemingly opposite things,
or who has qualities that are opposite,
to a statement that seems to say two opposite things, but that nevertheless may be true,
or to the use of such statements in writing or speech.
Here's the word used in a sentence from the introduction to Two Serious Ladies,
a novel by Jane Bowles by Sheila Hetty.
In some ways, I think the idea of a serious lady might even be a paradox,
if to be serious means to understand the world according to one's own precepts,
experiences, and observations, and to behave in a way that reflects this.
A lady, on the other hand, follows rules that others have devised.
How then can a serious lady be anything other than a very peculiar and odd creature,
which the women in this book certainly are?
The ancient Greeks were well aware that a paradox, the saying less is more,
for example, can take us outside our usual way of thinking.
They combined the prefix para, meaning beyond or outside of, with the verb dokain,