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Definition of dispute noun from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

dispute

noun
 
/dɪˈspjuːt/,
 
/ˈdɪspjuːt/
 
/dɪˈspjuːt/,
 
/ˈdɪspjuːt/
[countable, uncountable]
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  1. an argument between two people, groups or countries; discussion about a subject on which people disagree
    • industrial/pay disputes
    • dispute between A and B a dispute between the two countries about the border
    • dispute over/about something the latest dispute over fishing rights
    • in dispute with somebody/something The union is in dispute with management over working hours.
    • in/under dispute The cause of the accident was still in dispute (= being argued about).
    • These are not the issues under dispute.
    • beyond dispute The matter was settled beyond dispute by the court judgment (= it could no longer be argued about).
    • open to dispute His theories are open to dispute (= can be disagreed with).
    Extra Examples
    • He proposed a negotiated settlement of the outstanding disputes between the two countries.
    • The incident sparked off a major dispute between the two countries.
    • The purpose of industrial tribunals is to adjudicate disputes between employers and employees.
    • There were lengthy internal disputes between the two wings of the party.
    • a jurisdictional dispute between the Army and the CIA
    • a long-standing dispute between the families over ownership of the land.
    • to minimize the scope for dispute over the meaning of the terms employed
    • There is considerable dispute over the precise definition of ‘social class’ as a term.
    • The actual sum of compensation due is still in dispute.
    • The employees have been in dispute with management for three weeks.
    • They became embroiled in a dispute with their competitors.
    • No one could remember exactly how the dispute had arisen.
    • Police have difficulties in dealing with domestic disputes.
    • The exact relationship between the two languages is a matter of dispute among scholars.
    • The simmering dispute erupted in public when the two men came to blows at the party conference.
    • There is no dispute as to the facts.
    • disputes concerning environmental protection
    • one of the many factors that led to the dispute
    • His job is to settle pay disputes.
    Topics Opinion and argumentc1
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective
    • considerable
    • major
    • serious
    verb + dispute
    • cause
    • lead to
    • provoke
    dispute + verb
    • arise
    • begin
    • erupt
    preposition
    • beyond dispute
    • in dispute (with)
    • under dispute
    phrases
    • a matter, point, subject, etc. of dispute
    • the resolution of a dispute
    • the settlement of a dispute
    See full entry
    Word OriginMiddle English: via Old French from Latin disputare ‘to estimate’ (in late Latin ‘to dispute’), from dis- ‘apart’ + putare ‘reckon’.
See dispute in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee dispute in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic English

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