=> argument1 fra. argumentation, argumentaire
âvand âvordan
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... son argumentation ne résiste pas à l’examen.
2 eng. argue
ma-goftan (pâra ye dovom e be-gu-ma-gu !)
be-gu-ma-gu kardan( âvand-mandâna)
The underlying root is *peu- "to cut, strike, stamp." It rendered other words a bit like "putative" in that they have to do with thinking or believing: "dispute" from Latin disputare "to think contentiously," "impute" from Latin imputare "to charge," and repute from Latin reputare "to examine repeatedly."be-gu-ma-gu kardan
cun-o-cerâ namudan
sar-o-kalla zadan
šâx-be-šâx šodan( e zabâni)
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eng. at loggerheads : šâx-be-šâx
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It is only as a science, replied Demea, subjected to human reasoning and disputation, that I postpone the study of Natural Theology.
(HUME,
Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion )
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It might reasonably be expected in questions which have been canvassed and disputed with great agerness, since the first origin of science and philosophy, that the meaning of all the terms, at least, should have been agreed upon among the disputants; and our enquiries, in the course of two thousand years, been able to pass from words to the true and real subject of the controversy.
(David HUME,
An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding )