Hobby, hubby, hugged, haggle, hottest and hatter are words. They contain a double consonant.
a philopolemicist - A person who loves to argue or debate.
Argue
People argue for many different reasons. Some can be about money or to marriage. Also, family member argue because they don't agree with each other and they both think they are right.
Generally when people argue, they argue by comparing the facts that they have. The person whose facts are more compelling wins the argument. An ignorant person does not know any facts. A person who argues with no facts argues with emotion or opinion based on nothing that can be checked or verified by the other side. It is not possible to argue against nothing (no facts.) So while a person who has no facts to bolster his argument can continue arguing, it is a fruitless argument; hence, you can't argue with ignorance. The ignorant person may walk away from an argument believing himself or herself to have won -- not because he or she had the better argument based on facts that could be checked by the other side - but because he or she used opinion or feelings to bolster his or her "argument."
negotiate, barter, discussdeal, chop, argue
He paid the merchant's price because he did not have time to haggle. The opposing political parties often haggle over the particular language in a Congressional bill.
The Yiddish word "hundel" means a small dog or a puppy.
I got a lower price because the merchant was willing to haggle.
Haggle means to debate to make a deal. Example: Haggling over the price of a car.
The old lady continued to haggle with the fruit merchant over the price of peaches.
Haggle
Haggle hut is in gongs pipe, so just go to haggle hut and you will be there!!
Yes, "haggle" is not a Yiddish word. It is a term in English that means to negotiate over the terms of a transaction, typically to lower the price.
To argue in a petty manner
dispute
gorden bracks