Word of the Day Archive
Friday June 17, 2005

altercation \awl-tuhr-KAY-shuhn\ , noun:
A heated, noisy, or angry dispute; noisy controversy or argument.

Like Epaminondas, he fought continuously with his fellow generals and was nearly court-martialed for his altercations with his superiors -- like Epaminondas he was relieved of command after his greatest victories.
-- Victor Davis Hanson, The Soul Of Battle

He indulged in a heated altercation with his fellow-townsmen over some land which they thought theirs, though it was certainly his.
-- Carl Van Doren, The American Novel

The professor had had a trifling altercation in the morning with that young gentleman, owing to a difference about the introduction of crackers in school-time.
-- William Makepeace Thackeray, Vanity Fair

Get Word of the Day on your iPhone or iPod touch »


Download the FREE Dictionary.com app

Altercation comes from Latin altercatio, altercation-, from altercari, "to dispute (with another)," from alter, "other." The verb form is altercate.

Dictionary.com Entry and Pronunciation for altercation

 

AddThis:  AddThis: del.icio.usAddThis: digg.comAddThis: FacebookAddThis: furl.netAddThis: www.netscape.comAddThis: myweb2.search.yahoo.comAddThis: www.stumbleupon.comAddThis: www.google.comAddThis: www.technorati.comAddThis: blinklist.comAddThis: newsvine.comAddThis: ma.gnolia.comAddThis: reddit.comAddThis: favorites.live.com