DonBoy
Let me say publicly that DonBoy’s answer exudes a combination of intuitive genius and confidence that make me think DonBoy is going to do big things in his life. -- Steven D. Levitt (Freakonomics blog)
Saturday, June 17, 2006
"Arguably" and "inarguably" are not opposites. Unlike the well-known pair "flammable" and "inflammable", this is accomplished by having the the "-arguably" in "inarguably" mean "it cannot be argued to be false", while the bare word "arguably" means ""it can be argued to be true".