Proof; evidence., A reason or reasons offered in proof, to induce belief, or convince the mind; reasoning expressed in words; as, an argument about, concerning, or regarding a proposition, for or in favor of it, or against it., A process of reasoning, or a controversy made up of rational proofs; argumentation; discussion; disputation., The subject matter of a discourse, writing, or artistic representation; theme or topic; also, an abstract or summary, as of the contents of a book, chapter, poem., Matter for question; business in hand., The quantity on which another quantity in a table depends; as, the altitude is the argument of the refraction., The independent variable upon whose value that of a function depends., To make an argument; to argue.
Someone who likes arguing or can be difficult to find agreement with can be described as being argumentative.
To add to; to lend support; to increase.
When justices are not listening to arguments, they are (1) reading written arguments about cases and (2) holding private meetings to decide the meaning of the law.
When justices are not listening to arguments, they are (1) reading written arguments about cases and (2) holding private meetings to decide the meaning of the law.
When justices are not listening to arguments, they are (1) reading written arguments about cases and (2) holding private meetings to decide the meaning of the law.
Embodying or pertaining to a fallacy; illogical; fitted to deceive; misleading; delusive; as, fallacious arguments or reasoning.
Formal arguments are the named arguments defined by the function. Actual arguments are those arguments that were passed to the function by the caller.
Arguments using numbers to prove their point.
common form of moral arguments
argue is a verb meaning: 1. Present reasons and arguments 2. Have an argument about something 3. Give evidence of
A speaker addresses arguments and counterarguments by providing his or her own arguments. The speaker will have to provide evidence that supports his or her own arguments.
No! For that meaning you'd probably use the word "battles" - or "arguments" for a verbal rather than a physical disagreement. Hope that helps!
are. Causal Explanations arguments
Arguments is in the plural form for the singular noun argument.