View example sentences and word forms for Argues.
Argues meaning
third-person singular simple present indicative of argue
Example sentences (20)
One side argues for extending lockdowns without fully comprehending the level of destruction that creates; the other side argues for jumping back into life while inevitably downplaying the risk to human life and infuriating their fellow Americans.
The city argues the Appeal Court should uphold Belobaba's freedom of expression finding but, in its filings, also argues the legislation violates unwritten constitutional principles of democracy under Section 3 of the charter.
Edmund Wilson argues that statistically "the logic of the 'Modest proposal' can be compared with defense of crime (arrogated to Marx) in which he argues that crime takes care of the superfluous population".
When Polkinghorne argues that the minute adjustments of cosmological constants for life points towards an explanation beyond the scientific realm, Blackburn argues that this relies on a natural preference for explanation in terms of agency.
Aaron LaBerge, chief technology officer of the Disney Media & Entertainment Distribution (DMED) division, argues that the company also has also built an industry-leading competency in ad tech.
After citing instances when Trump called for peaceful actions and eventually asked those who forced their way into the Capitol to go home, the response brief argues that nothing he did could be defined as “engaging in insurrection.
Alberta maintains it has exclusive jurisdiction over those matters, while the federal government argues environmental issues are shared.
A letter signed by the likes of Margret Atwood, George Saunders and Jodi Picoult argues that AI is ‘flooding the market with mediocre, machine-written books’.
AncestorStealing, a that has researched and outed a parade of alleged fake Indians, argues it’s done for notoriety, profit and gain: “It’s all about the money.
And beyond that, Simpson’s script argues, she doesn’t deserve to be shamed for a desperate grasp at happiness, especially given how little we know about Hamlet’s father and his character from the text of “Hamlet” itself.
A new account by the Yale historian Ned Blackhawk argues that Native peoples shaped the development of American democracy while being dispossessed of their land.
A new book argues that the invention of states and corporations has something to teach us about A.I. But perhaps it’s the other way around.
Aptly named Andrea Sunshine loves tanning in the buff – and argues it's totally natural to do so.
A reader makes the claim that Super Metroid is no longer the best Metroid game and argues that the most recent entry is the best.
A recent article in the American Intelligence Journal by John A. Gentry argues that this represents a “belated success” of the Soviet active measures campaigns designed to destabilize the U.S. from within.
A second position argues that Russia-India relations are essentially immune to change.
As the family argues over who is responsible for being the bad influence, they decide to go to counseling to try and work through the problem.
As this Atlantic Council article argues NATO poses a threat to Russian imperialism not Russian security.
A suspicious eye is cast on the so-called conservatives on the bench Deference argues that agencies are often insulated from the usual checks and balances necessary for separation of powers.
BAE is currently blackballed by some 'ethical' investors but, he argues, Ukraine highlights their positive role in safeguarding democracies and standing up to tyrants.