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Definitions

eristic

[e-ris-tik] / ɛˈrɪs tɪk /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

What eristic discipline they brought to their sciolistic quibbles, though prone to occasional bursts of rodomontade!

From Washington Post • Aug. 21, 2015

Sulzberger's congeners will be pleased to find that The Tooth Merchant, though occasionally eristic, never stoops to flocculence.

From Time Magazine Archive

Within the war room, the atmosphere is informal, spirited, irreverent, eristic -- and often openly critical of GM's past practices.

From Time Magazine Archive

Socrates disclaims the character of a professional eristic, and also, with a sort of ironical admiration, expresses his inability to attain the Megarian precision in the use of terms.

From Theaetetus by Jowett, Benjamin

The philosophy which in the first and second generation was a great and inspiring effort of reflection, in the third becomes sophistical, verbal, eristic.

From Euthydemus by Jowett, Benjamin