beggar the question
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]By alteration of beg the question.
Verb
[edit]beggar the question (third-person singular simple present beggars the question, present participle beggaring the question, simple past and past participle beggared the question)
- To beg the question.
- 1964, Hearings of the Special Subcommittee on Construction of Military Hospital Facilities of the Committee on Armed Services, No. 64, United States Congress, p. 9823.
- So this could and can be done but, of course, that beggars the question of putting these people on the civilian economy.
- 1997, Issy Pilowsky, Abnormal Illness Behaviour, John Wiley, pages 16–17:
- Unfortunately, this definition beggars the question because we are left not knowing what it is that allows access to the sick role, but prefer not to seek it.
- 1964, Hearings of the Special Subcommittee on Construction of Military Hospital Facilities of the Committee on Armed Services, No. 64, United States Congress, p. 9823.
Usage notes
[edit]- Uses of the term reflect all senses of beg the question, including the proscribed ones.