Adjective
Filled with contradictions; inconsistent.
Inclined to contradict or cavil
Source: Webster's dictionaryAbout some inner contradictions of running." Source: Internet
But such complaints over standards and contradictions are likely a preview of what will happen over the next several months, as more Canadians emerge from their bubbles and try to figure out how to behave in a new reality. Source: Internet
And there is America, Blight writes, revealing, once again, its history and character consisting, "essentially" of "the embodiment of contradictions". Source: Internet
Cerebral and visceral, soft and heavy, melodic and abrasive, tender and brutal, familiar and strange, western and eastern, beautiful and ugly, taut yet sprawling and epic, they are a tangle of contradictions." Source: Internet
As the level of technology improves, existing forms of social relations become inconsistent and unnecessary, creating contradictions between the level of technology in the means of production, and the organization of society and its economy in particular. Source: Internet
Austria was afraid of future conflicts with Russia or Prussia and the United Kingdom was opposed to their expansion as well – and Talleyrand managed to take advantage of these contradictions within the former anti-French coalition. Source: Internet