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Argument — European starts to make it clear
Answer for the clue "Argument — European starts to make it clear ", 7 letters:
polemic
Alternative clues for the word polemic
Word definitions for polemic in dictionaries
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES ▪ Essentially, the play is a polemic on the judicial system. ▪ We discussed, planned, and engaged in passionate polemics. EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ Also, I am dismayed by the polemics of some on the left. ▪ And this is not ...
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Polemic usually refers to a disputation of religious, philosophical, political, or scientific matters. It may also refer to: Polemic (magazine) , British magazine published between 1945 and 1947 Polemic (band) , a Slovak ska group
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1640s, from French polémique (from Middle French polemique ) "disputatious, controversial," or directly from Greek polemikos "of war, warlike, belligerent; skilled in war, fit for service; like an enemy, stirring up hostility," from polemos "war," of unknown ...
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Polemic \Po*lem"ic\, n. One who writes in support of one opinion, doctrine, or system, in opposition to another; one skilled in polemics; a controversialist; a disputant. The sarcasms and invectives of the young polemic. --Macaulay. A polemic argument or ...
Usage examples of polemic.
The limits of the latter therefore seem to be indefinitely extended, whilst on the other hand tradition, and polemics too in many cases, demanded an adherence to the shortest formula.
Atta voiced virulently anti-Semitic and anti-American opinions, ranging from condemnations of what he described as a global Jewish movement centered in New York City that supposedly controlled the financial world and the media, to polemics against governments of the Arab world.
According to some records, Ibn Kora never even reached the Khazar capital and did not take part in the famous polemic, although he had been invited to join.
Al-Bakri claims that the Jewish participant in the polemic had dispatched a man to poison or slay Ibn Kora, but according to other sources, Farabi was detained on the way and arrived only after the debate was already over.
Islamic sources that believed Ibn Kora never took part in the polemic and never even reached the court of the Khazar kaghan, because he had been poisoned en route, cite a certain text that, they say, could be his biography.
This question of pre- versus postsynaptic plasticity has been a major source of polemic in recent years, but with most theoreticians favouring the postsynaptic side as the main site of plasticity.
Isailo Suk, who is fluent in Arabic and studies Islamic sources on the Khazar polemic.
Nor does Phillips indulge in excessive feminist polemics or tendentious slanting of events.
Ireland would compel us to guard with ships and soldiers a new line of coast, certainly amounting, with all its sinuosities, to more than 700 miles--an addition of polemics, in our present state of hostility with all the world, which must highly gratify the vigorists, and give them an ample opportunity of displaying that foolish energy upon which their claims to distinction are founded.
But in the assiduous prosecution of these theological studies, the emperor of the Romans imbibed the illiberal prejudices and passions of a polemic divine.
Orient and of the traditional disciplines of philology, history, rhetoric, and doctrinal polemic.
At all events he accomplished by his speeches a complete overthrow of his opponents the Phosphorists, without engaging in the barren polemics to which they invited him.
Yet it is also possible that the Pauline traits found in the magician were the outcome of the redaction, in so far as the whole polemic against Paul is here struck out, though certain parts of it have been woven into the polemic against Simon.
In his monographic works also, he endeavours to examine impartially the history of dogma, and to acquire the historic stand-point between the estimate of the orthodox dogmatists and that of Gottfried Arnold Mosheim, averse to all fault-finding and polemic, and abhorring theological crudity as much as pietistic narrowness and undevout Illuminism, aimed at an actual correct knowledge of history, in accordance with the principle of Leibnitz, that the valuable elements which are everywhere to be found in history must be sought out and recognised.
This subversion is true not only of Marxist theory explicitly engaged in polemics against literary autonomy, but also of deconstructionist theory, even at its most hermetic and abstract.