argument.
1. m. reasoning used to test or prove a proposition, either to convince someone of what is affirmed or denied.
2. m. case or matter in question in a work.
3. m. summary, to give brief news of the affair of the literary work or of each of the parties at which it is divided, usually put at the beginning of them.
4. m. Gram. Plug-in required by the meaning of the word they modify; e.g., care
EC of reason; prepare a test.1. m. Fil. Which part of the opposition between two facts in conclusion of the one opposite of what we know of the other.
1. m. Fil. Which is based on views or acts of the same person who goes to fight it or try to convince her.
1. m. Fil. The founded on reasons of similarity and equality between the proposed fact and which it is concluded.
1. m. reasoning that is by turning to justifiably prove a thesis.
1. m. Fil. argument to pari.
1. m. Fil. dilemma.1. m. Fil. The who has wholesale a disjunctive proposition; e.g. Vice should be punished in this life or the other, so is not always punished on this, then it has to be punished in the other.
1. m. Fil. The that is taken from the silence of those persons of authority which natural that they knew or speak of a thing, as relating to the subject they deal with, are omitted.
argument ontological.1. m. Fil. Employed by St. Anselm to demonstrate a priori the existence of God, on the basis of the idea we have of being perfectísimo.
1. loc. verb. Fil. Strengthen it to make more difficult their solution.
1. loc. verb. Fil. Give solution.
? V.
retaliation of the argument