redargue
Verb
Verb Forms: redargued, redarguing, redargues
- To disprove or refute an argument or claim.
- To disprove or refute (someone) in an argument.
- To rebut or refute (an argument, a proposition, etc.).
- Often followed by for or of: to censure, to rebuke, to reprove (someone or something).
- To argue (a case, proposition, etc.) against someone.
- To present a disproof or refutation of an argument, a person, etc.
Examples
- It was difficult to redargue his opponent’s claim that "QI" wasn’t a real word in Words With Friends.
Origin / Etymology
From Late Middle English redarguen, redargue (“to defeat (someone) in an argument; to rebuke, reprove”), from Middle French redarguer and Old French redargüer (“to disprove, refute; to accuse, blame; to rebuke, reprove”) (modern French rédarguer), and from their etymon Latin redarguere (“to disprove, refute”) (compare Late Latin redarguere (“to rebuke, reprove”)), the present active infinitive of redarguō (“to disprove, refute; to contradict”), from red- (a variant of re- (prefix meaning ‘again’)) + arguō (“to assert, declare; to clarify, make plain; to prove, show; to accuse, charge with; to censure, rebuke, reprove; to blame; to denounce as false”) (possibly ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *h₂erǵ- (“argent, white; glittering”), in the sense of casting light on something to make it clear). Doublet of argue.
Cognates
* Catalan redargüir
* Italian redarguire
* Old Occitan redarguir
* Portuguese redargüir
* Spanish redargüir
Synonyms
Scrabble Score: 10
redargue: valid Scrabble (US) TWL Wordredargue: valid Scrabble Word in Merriam-Webster MW Dictionary
redargue: valid Scrabble Word in International Collins CSW Dictionary