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réfuter

Réfuter is a French verb meaning to refute, to prove that a statement or theory is false or erroneous. It is used to counter an argument by presenting evidence, counter-examples, or logical reasoning, thereby diminishing its force or validity. The term is common in academic, legal, journalistic, and everyday argumentative contexts.

Etymology and forms: Réfuter comes from Latin refutare, meaning to drive back or repel, and entered French

Usage and nuance: Réfuter differs from nier (to deny) and contester (to challenge) in that réfuter implies

See also: réfutation, réfutabilité, réfutable.

via
Old
French
réfuter.
It
is
a
regular
-er
verb.
Present
tense
forms
are:
je
réfute,
tu
réfutes,
il
réfute,
nous
réfutons,
vous
réfutez,
ils
réfutent.
The
passé
composé
uses
avoir:
j’ai
réfuté;
the
imperfect
is
je
réfutais,
the
future
je
réfuterai,
and
the
conditional
je
réfuterais.
The
past
participle
is
réfuté,
used
as
an
adjective
in
phrases
such
as
une
thèse
réfutée.
disproof
through
evidence
or
reasoning
that
undermines
the
claim.
It
is
often
associated
with
rigorous
argumentation,
scientific
critique,
or
legal
rebuttals
rather
than
mere
disagreement.
Réfutation
can
be
explicit,
presenting
data
or
logic,
or
implicit,
by
demonstrating
inconsistent
premises
or
faulty
methodology.
The
related
noun
is
réfutation.