AMPHIBOLOGY, in Grammar and Rhetoric, a term used to denote a phrase susceptible of two different interpretations. Amphibology arises from the order of the phrase, rather than from the ambiguous meaning of a word. Of this kind was that answer which Pyrrhus received from the oracle: Aio te, Acida, Romanos vincere posse; where the amphibology consists in this, that the words te and Romanos may either of them precede, or either of them follow the words posse vincere, indifferently.