¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Redarguing
1. redargue [v] - See also: redargue
Lexicographical Neighbors of Redarguing
Literary usage of Redarguing
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine (1824)
"... no doubt the chances are infinitesimally small, that any person, concerned
from his own interests in the redarguing of the said claim, will fail to come ..."
2. Resolves, Divine, Moral, Political by Owen Felltham (1832)
"If after, he did fly out, it was the redarguing of his misguided friends, not
his being stripped of all, that moved him. Nay, it is certain, ..."
3. The Bards of the Bible by George Gilfillan (1853)
"Many are redarguing the whole questions of supernatural inspiration and the
Scripture canon from their foundations ..."
4. The American Presbyterian Review by Henry Boynton Smith, James Manning Sherwood (1867)
"The best arguments of his opponents he seta aside by his empirical doctrine of
causation, of which he says again, in redarguing the theory of a soul: " all ..."
5. The New Statistical Account of Scotland by Society for the Benefit of the Sons and Daughters of the Clergy (1845)
"... Archbishop of Canterbury, a Bull from Pope Boniface VIIL, redarguing the King's
claim to the superiority of Scotland, and setting forth the title of his ..."
6. Latin Phrases and Maxims: Collected from the Institutional and Other Writers by John Trayner (1861)
"... is chiefly of importance in redarguing the presumption of law, that the person
who contracted with him was taking advantage of his youth and ..."