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dispute
[ dih-spyoot ]
verb (used without object)
- to engage in argument or debate:
She liked nothing more than to dispute with her fellow law students.
- to argue vehemently; wrangle or quarrel:
Those two are always disputing about something or other.
verb (used with object)
- to argue or debate about; discuss:
Whether excessive time spent on the internet can be called an addiction is hotly disputed.
- to argue against; call into question:
Historians dispute this claim, suggesting Raleigh could not possibly have discovered the potato in the places he visited.
- to quarrel or fight about; contest:
We stopped to watch a puffed-up crow disputing territory with a cat.
- Archaic. to strive against; oppose:
to dispute an advance of troops.
noun
- a debate, controversy, or difference of opinion:
Players were elated when the equal pay dispute was finally resolved.
- a wrangling argument; quarrel:
Some women at the end of the bar were having a noisy dispute about who should be the designated driver.
Synonyms: bickering, squabble, wrangle, altercation, disputation
dispute
verb
- to argue, debate, or quarrel about (something)
- tr; may take a clause as object to doubt the validity, etc, of
- tr to seek to win; contest for
- tr to struggle against; resist
noun
- an argument or quarrel
Derived Forms
- disˈputer, noun
Other Words From
- dis·pute·less adjective
- dis·put·er noun
- pre·dis·pute noun verb predisputed predisputing
- re·dis·pute verb redisputed redisputing
- un·dis·put·ing adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of dispute1
Idioms and Phrases
- in dispute,
- being fought or argued over; debated or contested; unresolved:
The authorship of the recently discovered text is in dispute.
Both countries argue that the territories in dispute originally belonged to them.
- engaged in an argument or disagreement:
The program enables parties in dispute to settle their differences over the internet without face-to-face mediation.
More idioms and phrases containing dispute
see in dispute .Synonym Study
Example Sentences
University officials disputed the union’s allegations, saying in a statement that “we fundamentally disagree with AFSCME’s claims of bad faith bargaining and characterization of unacceptable bargaining proposals.”
He said the city’s funding withdrawal led him to believe the project was not financially viable, a claim the developers disputed.
He disputed the idea that jurors’ identities were meant to be kept secret, arguing Olmedo’s ruling only hid information contained in “the forms that the jurors fill out relating to their jury service.”
US state department spokesman Matthew Miller meanwhile told a news conference in Washington that he was “not in a position to dispute the reports” about the whereabouts of Hamas’s leadership.
Dozens of tenants at an affordable housing complex for arts and entertainment workers are in rebellion amid a dispute over a rent increase and other alleged issues at the Hollywood property.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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