argumentation

See also: Argumentation

English

Etymology

Inherited from Middle English argumentacioun, from Anglo-Norman argumentacion, Middle French argumentation, or their etymon Latin argūmentātiō; by surface analysis, argument +‎ -ation.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˌɑːɡjəmɛnˈteɪʃən/, /ˌɑːɡjəmənˈteɪʃən/

Noun

argumentation (usually uncountable, plural argumentations)

  1. Inference based on reasoning from given propositions.
    His chain of argumentation is flawed.
    • 1989 January, Werner Winter, “On a new claim concerning substratum influence upon Tocharian”, in Central Asiatic Journal[1], volume 33, number 1/2, Harrassowitz Verlag, →ISSN, page 131:
      None of the traditional proposals suffers from the weaknesses characteristic of CAW's suggestions: what CAW has to offer are mere guesses, arrived at in a totally unsystematic way and totally unsupported by rational and reasonable argumentation.
  2. An exchange of arguments
    Their argumentation continued long into the night.
  3. The addition of arguments to a model; parameterization.
    • 2009, Iyad Rahwan, Argumentation in Artificial Intelligence, →ISBN, page 24:
      An argumentation framework has an obvious representation as a directed graph where nodes are arguments and edges are drawn from attacking to attacked arguments.

Derived terms

Collocations

Translations

Further reading

French

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin argūmentātiōnem. By surface analysis, argumenter +‎ -ation.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /aʁ.ɡy.mɑ̃.ta.sjɔ̃/
  • Audio:(file)

Noun

argumentation f (plural argumentations)

  1. argument (process of reasoning)

Further reading

Swedish

Noun

argumentation c

  1. argument, arguing; a discussion or a quarrel
  2. argument; process of reasoning

Declension

Declension of argumentation
nominative genitive
singular indefinite argumentation argumentations
definite argumentationen argumentationens
plural indefinite argumentationer argumentationers
definite argumentationerna argumentationernas