Debating Skills

7 words in this vocabulary list

noun a question that is asked in a challenging or confrontational manner, often used in a legal or investigative context

  • During the trial, the defense attorney began to cross question the witness.
  • The teacher started to cross question the student about their whereabouts during lunch.
  • The detective was really cross questioning the suspect in the interrogation room.
  • The journalist decided to cross question the politician on his controversial statements.

noun the state of being false or untrue; the quality of not being accurate or correct

  • The defense attorney presented evidence to prove the falsity of the witness's testimony.
  • I can't believe the falsity of that rumor going around school.
  • Don't listen to him, he's just spreading falsity to stir up drama.
  • The artist used abstract shapes and colors to represent the falsity of reality.

noun a dogmatic statement

  • The judge's ruling was based solely on ipse dixit, without any supporting evidence.
  • Don't just believe him because of his ipse dixit, do some research yourself.
  • I call ipse dixit on that claim, it sounds too good to be true.
  • Her argument was strong, but it relied too heavily on ipse dixit and lacked concrete examples.

noun the ability to express oneself fluently and grammatically in speech

  • The oracy skills of the students were evident during the debate competition.
  • She's really good at oracy, always able to express her thoughts clearly.
  • I need to work on my oracy game before the presentation.
  • Oracy is like a tool that helps you communicate effectively in any situation.

verb to cite as evidence or proof in an argument or discussion

  • The lawyer adduced several pieces of evidence to support her argument in court.
  • She adduced a bunch of facts to prove her point.
  • He totally adduced some receipts to back up his story.
  • The artist adduced various colors to create a beautiful painting.

adjective able to be brought forward as evidence or argument

  • The lawyer argued that the evidence presented was adducible in court.
  • The teacher mentioned that only adducible sources should be used for the research paper.
  • I don't think that information is adducible for our project.
  • Her testimony was like an adducible piece of puzzle in solving the case.

noun the quality or state of being adversarial or in opposition

  • The adversariness between the two political parties was evident during the debate.
  • There was a lot of adversariness between the teams during the game.
  • The adversariness between those two is off the charts!
  • The adversariness of the storm was overwhelming, causing widespread destruction.