dispute: [13] Dispute comes via Old French disputer from Latin disputāre, a compound verb formed from the prefix dis- ‘separately’ and putāre ‘consider, reckon, think’ (source of a wide range of English words, from computer to reputation). It was originally a commercial term, denoting the calculation of a sum by considering each of its items separately, but its meaning eventually broadened out to ‘estimate, examine, weigh up’ – either mentally or (the sense which prevailed) by discussion with others.
The neutral sense ‘discuss’ held centre stage in classical Latin, but later (in the Vulgate, for instance) a note of acrimony appeared, signalling the beginnings of dispute’s current sense ‘argue’. => computer, count, putative, reputation
dispute (v.)
c. 1300, from Old French desputer (12c.) "dispute, fight over, contend for, discuss," from Latin disputare "weigh, examine, discuss, argue, explain," from dis- "separately" (see dis-) + putare "to count, consider," originally "to prune" (see pave).
Used in Vulgate in sense of "to argue, contend with words." Related: Disputable; disputed; disputing. The noun is not certainly recorded before 1590s (disputacioun in that sense is from late 14c.).
实用例句
1. The council recently drew fire for its intervention in the dispute.
委员会最近因为介入该起争端而遭到批评。
来自柯林斯例句
2. There are few goodies and baddies in this industrial dispute.
在这次劳资纠纷中几乎没有绝对的好人与坏人。
来自柯林斯例句
3. They agreed to try to settle their dispute by negotiation.
他们同意通过谈判来努力解决纠纷。
来自柯林斯例句
4. The dispute culminated last week in a lawsuit against the government.
上周这一纠纷达到高潮,政府被告上了法庭。
来自柯林斯例句
5. The company is currently in dispute with the government over price fixing.