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argumentative
[ahr-gyuh-men-tuh-tiv]
adjective
fond of or given to argument and dispute; disputatious; contentious.
The law students were an unusually argumentative group.
of or characterized by argument; controversial.
an argumentative attitude toward political issues.
Law.Ģżarguing or containing arguments suggesting that a certain fact tends toward a certain conclusion.
argumentative
/ ĖÉĖÉ”ĀįŹĖ³¾É²Ō³ŁÉ³ŁÉŖ±¹ /
adjective
given to arguing; contentious
characterized by argument; controversial
Other 51³Ō¹Ļ Forms
- argumentatively adverb
- argumentativeness noun
- nonargumentative adjective
- nonargumentatively adverb
- nonargumentativeness noun
- overargumentative adjective
- overargumentatively adverb
- overargumentativeness noun
- unargumentative adjective
- unargumentatively adverb
- unargumentativeness noun
- ˲¹°ł²µ³Ü˳¾±š²Ō³Ł²¹³Ł¾±±¹±š±ō²ā adverb
- ˲¹°ł²µ³Ü˳¾±š²Ō³Ł²¹³Ł¾±±¹±š²Ō±š²õ²õ noun
51³Ō¹Ļ History and Origins
Origin of argumentative1
Example Sentences
He was never petulant, argumentative or stubborn ā though I knew he was easily capable of those emotions.
Since his argumentative three-party governing coalition collapsed in November, he had been reliant on support from the opposition conservatives to pass any new laws, effectively rendering his administration a lame-duck government.
Investigators noted at the time that he was argumentative.
Ms Belinfante said she was described by officers as "rude and argumentative" and was "verbally abusive" towards them as she was escorted from the airport.
But she also noticed that people have become more argumentative.
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