Latvian

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Etymology

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Via other European languages, ultimately borrowed from Latin paradoxum, itself a borrowing from Ancient Greek παράδοξος (parádoxos, unexpected, strange).

Pronunciation

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Noun

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paradokss m (1st declension)

  1. paradox (a contradiction between statements assumed to be simultaneously true; a contradiction to something known or believed to be true, to something that is usually the case)
    kāds nepielūdzams paradokss: no tā, kas daudz dara, prasa arvien vairāk un vairākwhat implacable paradox: from he who does a lot one asks always more and more
    un nu slimajam jāmierina veselais!... nežēlīgs paradokssand now the sick must satisfy the healthy!... a cruel paradox
    paradokss ir pārsteidzošs divu spriedumu savienojums, kurā no formāli loģiskā viedokļa viens spriedums otru izslēdz, taču reāli abi ir vienlīdz iespējamia paradox is a surprising union of two judgments in which, from a formally logical viewpoint, one judgment excludes the other, but in reality both are equally possible
    asociatīvā dzeja ar savu spēju dialektiski apvienot un izskaidrot pretrunas, paradoksus ir sarežģītāka, tā prasa no lasītāja piepūli lasīt un domāt, salīdzināt un saprastassociative poetry with its ability to unify and explain contradictions (and) paradoxes dialectically is more complex, it requires from the reader an effort to read and think, to compare and understand

Declension

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Derived terms

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