0 present participle of contradict
1 (of people) to say the opposite of what someone else has said, or (of one fact or statement) to be so different from another fact or statement that one of them must be wrong:
Still, the contradicting presence of more gender dysphoria in childhood but less at application should alert the clinician when assessing eligibility.
And by conjunctive closure that would make it rational to accept that no ticket will win, contradicting our knowledge that the lottery has a winner.
In order to achieve their contradicting aims, they endeavoured to muster as much civility and politeness as they possibly could.
But thereby it too has an adversative quality, faint and implicit, in that it hints at contradicting an assumed objection.
Because of these contradicting effects, the education premium can either rise or fall when the supply of both skilled labor and physical capital increases.
A more thorough analysis offers some nuances without fundamentally contradicting the hypothesis.
Many of these will be old biases resurfacing under new names or new biases contradicting old ones.
By (ii) the triangle (b, c, d) is red, contradicting (i) and (iii).