46 results for: argue
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Dictionary Entries (10 more entries. View all »)
| Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1) | Cite This Source |
ar·gue
Audio Help [ahr-gyoo] Pronunciation Key verb, -gued, -gu·ing.
—Related forms
Audio Help [ahr-gyoo] Pronunciation Key verb, -gued, -gu·ing. –verb (used without object)
–verb (used with object)
| 1. | to present reasons for or against a thing: He argued in favor of capital punishment. |
| 2. | to contend in oral disagreement; dispute: The Senator argued with the President about the new tax bill. |
| 3. | to state the reasons for or against: The lawyers argued the case. |
| 4. | to maintain in reasoning: to argue that the news report must be wrong. |
| 5. | to persuade, drive, etc., by reasoning: to argue someone out of a plan. |
| 6. | to show; prove; imply; indicate: His clothes argue poverty. |
[Origin: 1275–1325; ME < AF, OF arguer < L argūtāre, -ārī, freq. of arguere to prove, assert, accuse (ML: argue, reason), though L freq. form attested only in sense “babble, chatter”
]
] —Related forms
ar·gu·er, noun
—Synonyms 1, 2. Argue, debate, discuss imply using reasons or proofs to support or refute an assertion, proposition, or principle. Argue implies presenting one's reasons: The scientists argued for a safer testing procedure; it may also imply disputing in an angry or excited way: His parents argue all the time. To discuss is to present varied opinions and views: to discuss ways and means. To debate is to interchange formal (usually opposing) arguments, esp. on public questions: to debate a proposed amendment.
| Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1) Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2006. |
Thesaurus Entries (5 more entries. View all »)
| Synonym Collection v1.1 | Cite This Source | |
| Main Entry: | argue | |
| Part of Speech: | adjective | |
| Synonyms: | analytical, argumentative, belligerent, carping, circuitous, cogent, contentious, controversial, debatable, disagreeable, disputatious, empirical, eristic, forensic, incisive, incontrovertible, inductive, insidious, irrefutable, polemic, presumptive, specious, tenable, trenchant, turbulent, unassailable, unruly, agonistic, a posteriori, a priori, casuistic, deductive, dialectic, disputative, factional, pedagogical, quodlibetic, sophistical, warring, watertight, wrangling | |
| Source: | Synonym Collection v1.1 Copyright © 2008 by Lexico Publishing Group, LLC. | |
| Synonym Collection v1.1 | Cite This Source | |
| Main Entry: | argue | |
| Part of Speech: | noun | |
| Synonyms: | altercation, appeal, argumentation, casuistry, contretemps, discursive, disputation, expostulation, forensics, hypothesis, induction, polemic, posit, postulate, predicate, premise, reasoning, ruction, sophism, sophistry, submission, argumentum, choplogic, devil's advocate, dialectic, enthymeme, lemma, man of straw, paralogism, parthian shot, philosophism, pilpul, prolepsis, quodlibet, sorites, special pleading, speciosity, syllogism | |
| Source: | Synonym Collection v1.1 Copyright © 2008 by Lexico Publishing Group, LLC. | |
| Roget's II: The New Thesaurus | Cite This Source | |
| Main Entry: | argue | |
| Part of Speech: | verb | |
| Definition: | To put forth reasons for or against something, often excitedly. | |
| Synonyms: | contend, debate, dispute, moot | |
| Source: | Roget's II: The New Thesaurus, Third Edition by the Editors of the American Heritage® Dictionary. Copyright © 2003, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved. | |
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