How many points in Scrabble is argument worth? argument how many points in Words With Friends? What does argument mean? Get all these answers on this page.
See how to calculate how many points for argument.
Is argument a Scrabble word?
Yes. The word argument is a Scrabble US word. The word argument is worth 11 points in Scrabble:
A1R1G2U1M3E1N1T1
Is argument a Scrabble UK word?
Yes. The word argument is a Scrabble UK word and has 11 points:
A1R1G2U1M3E1N1T1
Is argument a Words With Friends word?
Yes. The word argument is a Words With Friends word. The word argument is worth 15 points in Words With Friends (WWF):
A1R1G3U2M4E1N2T1
You can make 324 words from argument according to the Scrabble US and Canada dictionary.
From Middle English argument, from Anglo-Norman and Old French arguement, from Latin argūmentum (“argument (for a position); evidence, proof; point, theme; thesis, topic; plot (in theatre)”), from arguere + -mentum (suffix indicating the instrument, medium, or result of something). Arguere is the present active infinitive of arguō (“to argue, assert, declare; to make clear, prove, show; to accuse, charge with, reprove; to blame, censure; to denounce as false”), either ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *h₂erǵ- (“silver, white; glittering”), or from Hittite [script needed] (arkuwā(i)-, “to make a plea, state one’s case”). The English word is analysable as argue + -ment. Doublet of argumentum.
Displaced native Old English racu and ġeflit.
argument (countable and uncountable, plural arguments)
see Thesaurus:false, Thesaurus:stupid, Thesaurus:deceptive
The obsolete senses are derived from Middle English argumenten (“to argue, discuss; to consider, reflect”), from Old French argumenter (“to argue”), from Latin argūmentārī, the present active infinitive of argūmentor (“to adduce arguments or proof, prove, reason; to adduce (something) as argument or proof; to conclude”), from argūmentum (“argument (for a position); evidence, proof; point, theme; thesis, topic; plot (in theatre)”) (see further at etymology 1) + -or (the first-person singular present passive indicative of -ō (suffix forming regular first-conjugation verbs)).
The current sense is derived from the noun.
argument (third-person singular simple present arguments, present participle argumenting, simple past and past participle argumented)
Borrowed from Latin argūmentum.
argument m (plural arguments)
argument m inan
argument n (singular definite argumentet, plural indefinite argumenter)
From Middle Dutch argument, from Old French argument, from Latin argūmentum.
argument n (plural argumenten, diminutive argumentje n)
Borrowed from Latin argūmentum, from arguō (“prove, argue”).
argument m (plural arguments)
Borrowed from Italian argomento.
argument m (plural argumenti)
From Latin argumentum.
argument n (definite singular argumentet, indefinite plural argument or argumenter, definite plural argumenta or argumentene)
From Latin argumentum.
argument n (definite singular argumentet, indefinite plural argument, definite plural argumenta)
Borrowed from Latin argūmentum.
argument m inan (diminutive argumencik)
Borrowed from French argument, from Latin argumentum.
argument n (plural argumente)
argùment m (Cyrillic spelling аргу̀мент)
argument n