contest
noun
- creative competition
- competition
verb
- challenge
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ˈkɒn.tɛst/ / /ˈkɔntɛst/ / /ˈkɑn.tɛst/ / /kənˈtɛst/
noun
Etymology: PIE word *tréyes From French contester, from Old French, from Latin contestor (“to call to witness”).
- Controversy; debate.
“no contest”
“Your question betrays, I suspect, a somewhat naive vision of the world as much smaller (and much more homogenized) than it could possibly be — a vision that one of my "personal" visions, as you'll find it in some of my recent science fiction, is specifically and heartedly in contest with.”
- Struggle for superiority; combat.
- A competition.
“The child entered the spelling contest.”
verb
Etymology: PIE word *tréyes From French contester, from Old French, from Latin contestor (“to call to witness”).
- To contend.
“I will contest for the open seat on the board.”
“Of man, who dares in pomp with Jove contest?”
- To call into question; to oppose.
“The rival contested the dictator's re-election because of claims of voting irregularities.”
“Few philosophical aphorisms have been more frequently repeated, few more contested than this.”
- To strive earnestly to hold or maintain; to struggle to defend.
“The troops contested every inch of ground.”
- To make a subject of litigation; to defend, as a suit; to dispute or resist, as a claim, by course of law.