Quarrelsome vs Argue - What's the difference?
quarrelsome | argue |
Argumentative; belligerent; contentious; given to quarreling.
(obsolete) To prove.
To shows grounds for concluding ((that)); to indicate, imply.
* 1910 , , "The Soul of Laploshka", Reginald in Russia :
To debate, disagree or discuss opposing or differing viewpoints.
To have an argument, a quarrel.
To present (a viewpoint or an argument therefor).
As an adjective quarrelsome
is argumentative; belligerent; contentious; given to quarreling.As a verb argue is
.quarrelsome
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- She's too quarrelsome to participate in a civil conversation.
Synonyms
* See alsoargue
English
Verb
(argu)- To have killed Laploshka was one thing; to have kept his beloved money would have argued a callousness of feeling of which I was not capable.
- He also argued for stronger methods to be used against China.
- He argued as follows: America should stop Lend-Lease convoying, because it needs to fortify its own Army with the supplies.
- The two boys argued because of disagreement about the science project.
- He argued his point.
- He argued that America should stop Lend-Lease convoying because it needed to fortify its own Army with the supplies.
