Oxymorons

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Ming the Merciless

There is no mercy
Location
Inside my skull
Yeah that civil doesn't mean courteous but refers to civilians as it's not between countries but tribes within a country.

Civilians, people who are not armed forces in a war 😀
 

Dogtrousers

Lefty tighty. Get it righty.
According to the link below the "civil" in civil war has nothing to do with membership or otherwise of the armed forces. (After all, the combatants frequently are, or have been, fully organised armies - think of the New Model Army in the English CW or the Union and Confederate armies in the US CW). It means "relating to citizens" in that the combatants are all citizens of the same country.

https://www.merriam-webster.com/wordplay/civil-meaning-why-is-it-called-civil-war
 
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Chris S

Legendary Member
Location
Birmingham
Sun journalist
 

Webbo2

Über Member
The English were a rebellion according to one side. The other side it was a war between counties and as such not a civilian war.

It wasn’t a war between counties. Some historians class it as the war of 3 kingdoms. Also when it started by Scotland invading England a significant number of the Scottish army were professional soldiers having spent time in Europe fighting in the religious wars.
Hardly a civilian war.
 

Alex321

Guru
Location
South Wales
Yeah that civil doesn't mean courteous but refers to civilians as it's not between countries but tribes within a country.

No it doesn't.

It refers to citizens, and while the words have the same roots as civilians, civil war has nothing to do with civilians.

Civil wars are wars between organised forces, with all the normal army structures.

Civil war just means war between the citizens of one state.

But yes, it still has nothing to do with being courteous or civil to one another.
 
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