No.
George Carlin referred to "military intelligence" as an oxymoron in one of his comedy performances.
An oxymoron of crash would be crash landing.
If the people in it were complete opposites that would be an oxymoron.
If they were opposite then they would be an oxymoron but, they are the same so, I would say a redundancy.
'Peace force' would be an oxymoron with the word 'peace' in it.
that would be an oxymoron. pls click on link for further explaination http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxymoron that would be an oxymoron. pls click on link for further explaination http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxymoron
"Truthful politician would be an oxymoron," said Mr.Person.
No. Both words are synonyms. True Hoax would be an oxymoron.
An oxymoron is a conjoined pair of (seemingly) contradictory terms, e.g.deafening silence, pretty ugly, same difference, silent scream, or jumbo shrimp. The pairing, while apparently paradoxical, will usually have a coherent meaning.Also, you can think of an oxymoron as a contradiction or paradoxical phrase used intentionally for rhetorical affect. It consists usually of two words normally considered impossible to connect. Examples might be "tough love", "sometimes you must be cruel to be kind", or this, from the link below:Tennyson's Idylls of the King contains two oxymorons:"And faith unfaithful kept him falsely true"An oxymoron used as a figure of speech would be "lead balloon" (a misguided effort or creation). Although it is possible to make a lead balloon, it would almost certainly not function as a balloon.(see related question and links)An oxymoron is 2 words put together that do not match. eg. fuel-efficient HummerA group of word that are opposite.EXAMPLES:JUMBO SHRIMPCLEAN DUMPSTERHATER OF LOVE
No, tough does not rhyme with love. Rhymes involve matching sounds at the end of words, and tough and love have different ending sounds.
Yes, "much to do with hate but more with love" is an oxymoron in Romeo's quote. An oxymoron is a figure of speech that combines contradictory terms, like "hate" and "love" in this case. The juxtaposition of hate and love highlights the intense emotions that Romeo is feeling.
No, because an alarm can be visual. A silent Siren would be an oxymoron, since a siren is never silent!