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Ouinon

Ouinon is a neologism formed by blending the French words oui (yes) and non (no). It is used to describe a stance, statement, or state that contains elements of both affirmation and negation, or that resists a definitive yes-or-no verdict.

Etymology and usage have largely developed in modern, informal contexts such as online discussions, memes, and

In linguistic and philosophical discussions, ouinon can function as a cultural shorthand for undecidability or the

Variants and adoption: ouinon is sometimes written as nonhyphenated “ouinon,” other times as “oui-non” with a

See also: ambivalence, paradox, yes-no question, dual signaling, francophone internet culture.

debates
about
decision-making.
It
is
not
a
term
that
appears
in
standard
dictionaries,
but
it
has
circulated
as
a
concise
way
to
signal
ambivalence,
paradox,
or
linguistic
complexity
in
everyday
speech
and
writing.
limits
of
binary
evaluation.
While
it
is
not
a
formal
technical
term,
it
resonates
with
concepts
in
paraconsistent
logic
and
fuzzy
logic,
where
statements
may
resist
a
single
true/false
classification
or
admit
degrees
of
truth.
hyphen.
Its
use
tends
to
be
informal,
often
for
effect
in
titles,
captions,
social
media,
or
satirical
commentary.
It
is
not
standardized
and
may
carry
ironic
or
playful
connotations.