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Dispute   /dɪspjˈut/   Listen
Dispute

noun
1.
A disagreement or argument about something important.  Synonyms: conflict, difference, difference of opinion.  "There were irreconcilable differences" , "The familiar conflict between Republicans and Democrats"
2.
Coming into conflict with.  Synonym: contravention.
verb
(past & past part. disputed; pres. part. disputing)
1.
Take exception to.  Synonyms: challenge, gainsay.
2.
Have a disagreement over something.  Synonyms: altercate, argufy, quarrel, scrap.  "These two fellows are always scrapping over something"






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Dispute" Quotes from Famous Books



... of their arms, the assailing force, guided by their torch-bearers, made a rush for the Court House. As they approached the door, Woodburn, who had kept his post, unhurt, on one side of the steps, sprang forward to dispute their passage, and, after knocking up the swords and bayonets that were aimed at his breast, laid about him so lustily with his cudgel, that the whole party were, for some moments, kept at bay. At ...
— The Rangers - [Subtitle: The Tory's Daughter] • D. P. Thompson

... matters of taste: hardly even is the odium theologicum, so profound as the odium aestheticum. A man, perhaps, will more easily forgive another for disbelieving his own total depravity than for believing that Guido is a great painter or Tupper an inspiring poet. The present dispute, therefore, tenderly personal as it is on the part of one of the pleaders, is especially interesting as showing a very decided and gratifying advance in the civilization of literary men to-day as compared with that of a century or indeed half a century ago. If we go back still farther, ...
— The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 09, No. 51, January, 1862 • Various

... epoch, my eldest brother, already spoken of, was at the university, and studied theology.[8] Philosophic criticism was then beginning to elucidate certain Church dogmas. It was therefore not very surprising that father and son often differed in opinion. I remember that one day they had a violent dispute about religion and Church matters. My father stormed, and absolutely declined to yield; my brother, though naturally of a mild disposition, flushed deep-red with excitement; and he, too, could not abandon what he had recognised ...
— Autobiography of Friedrich Froebel • Friedrich Froebel

... his clothes, and he hadn't ever been there a visitin' before, and I didn't want to put him to work. But he hung on, and nothin' to do but what he had got to take hold and whitewash. And I had to give up and let him; for I thought it wus better manners to put a visiter to work, than it wus to dispute and quarrel with 'em: and, of course, he wasn't used to it, and he filled one eye most full of lime. ...
— Sweet Cicely - Or Josiah Allen as a Politician • Josiah Allen's Wife (Marietta Holley)

... the habit, irrevocably established, of never saying, I shall do, nor I am doing, but I have done, and you have the secret of the enormous amount of work I have been able to accomplish, and am accomplishing every day, in spite of my eighty years. Nobody will dispute me the honour of being the greatest hard-working ...
— Study and Stimulants • A. Arthur Reade


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