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oppugn
[ uh-pyoon ]
verb (used with object)
- to assail by criticism, argument, or action.
- to call in question; dispute.
oppugn
/ əˈpjuːn /
verb
- tr to call into question; dispute
Derived Forms
- opˈpugner, noun
Other Words From
- op·pugner noun
- unop·pugned adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of oppugn1
Example Sentences
Also, g before n, as gnat, gnaw, gnarl, gnome, gnash, reign, deign, sign, consign, assign, design, condign, benign, impugn, oppugn, arraign, campaign.
He never exults in his triumphs, nor is querulous on those who oppugned them.
Say, could not you twins, now, once come forward and speak as petition-masters-general in the halls of the Diet, or, as magistri sententiarum, oppugn one another within the walls of the universities on Commencement days?
I have amused myself by selecting from out this wealth of observations a group of facts wherein are displayed the secular instincts, the "anagke," of the species—oppugned, shattered, vanquished.
For, though behind by a cannon or schooner, That nation still is predominant Whose pulse beats quickest in zeal to oppugn or Succour another, in wrong or want, Passing the frontier in love and abhorrence.
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