1. To put forth reasons for or against; debate: It is time to stop arguing tax-rate reductions and to enact them (Paul Craig Roberts). 2. To attempt to prove by reasoning; maintain or contend: The speaker argued that more immigrants should be admitted to the country.3. To give evidence of; indicate: Similarities cannot always be used to argue descent (Isaac Asimov). 4. To persuade or influence (another), as by presenting reasons: argued the clerk into lowering the price.
INTRANSITIVE VERB:
1. To put forth reasons for or against something: argued for dismissal of the case; argued against an immediate counterattack.2. To engage in a quarrel; dispute.
ETYMOLOGY:
Middle English arguen, from Old French arguer, from Latin argtre, to babble, chatter, frequentative of arguere, to make clear. See arg- in Appendix I.
OTHER FORMS:
argu·er NOUN
SYNONYMS:
argue, quarrel1, wrangle, squabble, bicker These verbs denote verbal exchange expressing conflict. To argue is to present reasons or facts in order to persuade someone of something: I am not arguing with youI am telling you (James McNeill Whistler). Quarrel stresses hostility: The children quarreled over whose turn it was to wash the dishes.Wrangle refers to loud, contentious argument: audiences . . . who can be overheard wrangling about film facts in restaurants and coffee houses (Sheila Benson). Squabble suggests petty or trivial argument: The one absolutely certain way of bringing this nation to ruin . . . would be to permit it to become a tangle of squabbling nationalities (Theodore Roosevelt). Bicker connotes sharp, persistent, bad-tempered exchange: The senators bickered about the President's tax proposal for weeks. See also synonyms at discuss, indicate.