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rebut

literally, to repulse, rebuff, from Old French reboter, from re- back + boter to push, butt] : to refute, counteract, or disprove (as opposing evidence) by evidence or argument [ damaging testimony] [ a presumption] re·but·ta·ble adj

conclusive

a conclusion 2 : putting an end to debate or question esp. by reason of inability to be refuted con·clu·sive·ly adv con·clu·sive·ness n

Rebut

Rebut, to bar, reply, or contradict. To refute, oppose or counteract (something) by evidence, argument, or contrary proof, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., p. 1274.

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Refuter - Law Dictionary Search Results

Research workspace

Save terms and build your research trail

A free trial unlocks notes, tags, search history, and the full AI Studio desk for judgment research.

rebut

literally, to repulse, rebuff, from Old French reboter, from re- back + boter to push, butt] : to refute, counteract, or disprove (as opposing evidence) by evidence or argument [ damaging testimony] [ a presumption] re·but·ta·ble adj

conclusive

a conclusion 2 : putting an end to debate or question esp. by reason of inability to be refuted con·clu·sive·ly adv con·clu·sive·ness n

Rebut

Rebut, to bar, reply, or contradict. To refute, oppose or counteract (something) by evidence, argument, or contrary proof, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., p. 1274.

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Try the research workspace - 7 days free


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