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English
Etymology
From polemic + -al.
Pronunciation
Adjective
polemical (comparative more polemical, superlative most polemical)
- Related to argument or controversy; containing polemic, being polemic.
- Being an attempt to evaluate the arguments comprehensively.
1996, Igor Diakonoff, Leonid Kogan, “Addenda et Corrigenda to Hamito-Semitic Etymological Dictionary by V. Orel and O. Stolbova”, in Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenländischen Gesellschaft, volume 146, page 25: in order to give a comprehensive critical and polemical analysis of the Dictionary in question, a whole book would be needed.
1999, Gilbert Durand, The Anthropological Structures of the Imaginary, page 154:Bachelard has given a clear analysis of the "Atlas complex", a polemical complex and schema of verticalising effort or elevation, accompanied by a feeling of monarchical contemplation which diminishes the world so as better to glorify the gigantic, and the ambition inherent in ascensional reveries.
- (somewhat derogatory) Prone to causing disputes; inclined to causing the expression of opposing opinions, disputatious, contentious, edgy.
1834, L E L, chapter XVII, in Francesca Carrara. In Three Volumes.">…], volume II, London: Richard Bentley, , (successor to Henry Colburn), →OCLC, page 190:And though the annals of the period do not show us that there was less ale drawn, or less canary called for; men got dry with the heat of polemical discussion, and drunk with a text, not the fag end of a ballad, in their mouths; and people made a sort of morality of straight hair, long faces, and sad-coloured garments.
2012, Craig L. Blomberg, Interpreting the Parables, →ISBN, page 48:Not only are all these allegations worded in an unnecessarily polemical style, they are also simply false
2013, Johannes Zachhuber, Theology as Science in Nineteenth-Century Germany, →ISBN, page 57:Remarkable here is the rather polemical choice of words
- 2021, Carson Holloway, Dobbs and Democratic Legitimacy, in: Law and Liberty, December 21 2021
- If democratic legitimacy is a principle—and not just a polemical weapon wielded by the left in a selective and self-serving way—then we would have to consider not only the democratic legitimacy of a potential reversal of Roe but also the democratic legitimacy (if any) of the constitutional right to abortion itself.
Translations
of, or relating to argument or controversy; polemic or contentious
Noun
polemical (plural polemicals)
- A diatribe or polemic.
Further reading
- “polemical”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC.
- William Dwight Whitney, Benjamin E Smith, editors (1911), “polemical”, in The Century Dictionary , New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., →OCLC.