ANSWER vs REFUTATION: NOUN
- Something markedly similar to another of the same class.
- A defendant's response to the allegations against him or her.
- An act in response or retaliation.
- A correct solution.
- A solution, as to a problem.
- A correct reply.
- A spoken or written reply, as to a question.
- A statement that solves a problem or explains how to solve the problem
- The speech act of replying to a question
- A statement (either spoken or written) that is made in reply to a question or request or criticism or accusation
- The principle pleading by the defendant in response to plaintiff's complaint; in criminal law it consists of the defendant's plea of `guilty' or `not guilty' (or nolo contendere); in civil law it must contain denials of all allegations in the plaintiff's complaint that the defendant hopes to controvert and it can contain affirmative defenses or counterclaims
- A reply or response in act; an act or motion in return or in consequence, either as a mere result due to obedience, consent, or sympathy, or as a hostile procedure in retaliation or reprisal.
- In particular— A reply to a charge or an accusation; a statement made in defense or justification of one's self, with regard to a charge or an accusation; a defense; specifically, in law, a pleading on the part of the defendant, responding to the plaintiff's claim on questions of fact: correlative to demurrer, which raises only questions of law. The word as used in equity nearly, and as used in recent codes of procedure closely, corresponds to the common-law plea.
- The solution of a problem; the result of a mathematical operation; a statement made in response to a question set for examination: implying correctness, unless qualified.
- A nonverbal reaction
- Specifically— In fencing, the return hit.
- In fugue-music, the enunciation of the subject or theme by the second voice.
- Often abbreviated to ans. and adjective
- A reply, response, or rejoinder, spoken or written, to a question (expressed or implied), request, appeal, prayer, call, petition, demand, challenge, objection, argument, address, letter, or to anything said or written.
- A vocal answer to an attack on one's assertions
- An act of refuting or disproving; the overthrowing of an argument, opinion, testimony, doctrine or theory by argument or countervailing proof; confutation; disproof; evidence of falseness.
- The act or process of refuting or disproving, or the state of being refuted; proof of falsehood or error; the overthrowing of an argument, opinion, testimony, doctrine, or theory, by argument or countervailing proof.
- The act of refuting or disproving; the overthrowing of an argument, opinion, testimony, doctrine, or theory by argument or countervailing proof; confutation; disproof. Refutation is distinguished as direct or ostensive, indirect or apagogical, a priori or a posteriori, according to the kind of reasoning employed.
- Something, such as an argument, that refutes someone or something.
- The act of refuting.
- The act of determining that something is false
- Any evidence that helps to establish the falsity of something
- The speech act of answering an attack on your assertions
ANSWER vs REFUTATION: VERB
- Be sufficient; be adequate, either in quality or quantity
- Be satisfactory for; meet the requirements of or serve the purpose of
- Reply or respond to
- Give a defence or refutation of (a charge) or in (an argument)
- Respond to a signal
- React to a stimulus or command
- Give the correct answer or solution to
- Understand the meaning of
- Be liable or accountable
- Match or correspond
- N/A
ANSWER vs REFUTATION: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To act in response.
- To be liable or accountable.
- To serve the purpose; suffice.
- To correspond; match.
- To conform or correspond to.
- To be sufficient for (a need, for instance); fulfill.
- To act in response to.
- To argue in defense of oneself against (an accusation or charge).
- To speak or write in response to.
- To speak or write as a return, as to a question.
- To speak or write by way of return (originally, to a charge), or in reply; to make response.
- To make a satisfactory response or return.
- To be or act in return.
- To be or act by way of compliance, fulfillment, reciprocation, or satisfaction; to serve the purpose.
- To say or write in reply.
- N/A
ANSWER vs REFUTATION: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To meet or confront.
- To give a solution of a problem; find the result; give an answer, as to a question set for examination: as, he answered correctly in most instances.
- In particular— To reply to a charge or an accusation; make a statement in defense or justification of one's self, with regard to a charge or an accusation; specifically, in law, to interpose a pleading responsive to plaintiff's allegations of fact: sometimes used to include also the interposing of a demurrer: formerly sometimes with with.
- To make answer; speak or write in reply to a question (expressed or implied), request, appeal, petition, prayer, call, demand, challenge, address, argument, letter, or anything said or written; reply; respond: used with to, or absolutely.
- To reply or respond in act; act or move in response; do something in return for or in consequence of some speech, act, or movement from another source.
- React verbally
- The principal pleading by the defendant in response to plaintiff's complaint
- In criminal law it consists of the defendant's plea of `guilty' or `not guilty' (or nolo contendere)
- Be sufficient
- To conform to; correspond to; be similar, equivalent, proportionate, or correlative to in quality, attributes, position, etc.
- To be responsible for; be accountable for.
- To reply or respond to in act; act or move in response to or in consequence of: either as a mere result, in obedience to or sympathy with, or as a hostile act in retaliation or reprisal against: as, to answer prayer; to answer a summons; to answer a signal, as a ring at the door: hence, to answer the bell, or the door; to answer the helm (said of a ship when she obeys her rudder).
- To say or offer in reply, or in reply to; utter, or enunciate to, by way of response.
- To solve; find the result of; give an answer to, as to a question set for examination: as, he answered every question.
- To make answer to; speak or write in reply to; reply or respond to.
- To conform, correspond; be similar, equivalent, proportionate, or correlative in character, quality, or condition: with to.
- To meet, satisfy, or fulfil one's wishes, expectations, or requirements; be of service: with for; absolutely, to serve the purpose; attain the end; suit; serve or do (well or ill, etc.).
- To act or suffer in consequence of responsibility; meet the consequences: with for, rarely absolutely.
- To speak in behalf of another; declare one's self responsible or accountable, or give assurance or guaranty, for another; be responsible or accountable: used with for, rarely absolutely: as, I will answer for his safety; I am satisfied, but I cannot answer for my partner.
- Be satisfactory for
- N/A
ANSWER vs REFUTATION: RELATED WORDS
- Address, Solve, Replies, Replied, Explanation, Question, Result, Resolution, Suffice, Solution, Resolve, Do, Response, Reply, Respond
- Postulation, Argumentation, Denunciation, Counterexample, Counterargument, Rejoinder, Redargution, Reply, Response, Answer, Rebuttal, Defence, Defense, Falsification, Disproof
ANSWER vs REFUTATION: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Responding, Rebuttal, Replying, Unanswered, Address, Solve, Replies, Explanation, Question, Result, Resolution, Suffice, Solution, Response, Reply
- Assertion, Explication, Postulation, Argumentation, Counterargument, Rejoinder, Redargution, Reply, Response, Answer, Rebuttal, Defence, Defense, Falsification, Disproof
ANSWER vs REFUTATION: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Compounds an of worksheet answer key for each sentence type test is arguably more answer key that?
- Within an assessment built with Interact you can show people the correct answer to each question immediately after they answer it.
- They will not answer me in writing but they have called to verbally answer no.
- Enter the answer length or the answer pattern to get better results.
- Mail questionnaires have an advantage of providing more accurate answer, because respondents can answer the questionnaire in their spare time.
- Sometimes he asked them to discuss the answer with their neighbour, before volunteering an answer.
- For every incorrect answer, you will be shown the right answer along with an explanation.
- Learners can simply pinch the correct answer before they flip to check their answer.
- Senator Sessions, if you need to answer that, go ahead and answer it.
- If the defendant has not filed an answer by the answer date, a motion for leave to file a late answer may be necessary.
- However, this is not a refutation of the theoryclaims.
- But Mark Defunct does not refer to that refutation.
- Iterating this yields the desired positive unit refutation.
- Refutation: In this section, you refute the concession.
- The story is too absurd to need refutation.
- Because it not stated, refutation becomes more difficult.
- The prediction enables, even stimulates, its own refutation.
- ANT: Invalidation, Incognizance, refutation, ignorance, alien, ignoramus, stranger.
- It is a refutation of Marcionism and Valentinianism.
- Gregory of Nyssa wrote a large refutation, Antirrheticus.
ANSWER vs REFUTATION: QUESTIONS
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- Which is better second answer or third answer in FCE speaking?
- Why do riddles have an obvious answer but inappropriate answer?
- Should the refutation be at the beginning or the end?
- Can Guns Germs and steel be considered a refutation of guns?
- How many answers did the crossword solver find to the refutation?
- Does Johnson's'refutation'contradict Berkeley's argument?
- What two arguments does Berkeley make in his refutation of Locke's materialism?
- What is Kant's argument in the refutation of material idealism?
- Is there a biblical and scientific refutation of progressive creationism?
- When to use the refutation pattern for a persuasive speech?
- Does reading refutation text promote conceptual change?