A Person That Is Favoring One Side Of An Political Issue Is Called An Partisan.
The back side is called the reverse. The front side is called the obverse.
The front (obverse) of a coin is called "heads" because there is usually a profile head image of an important person in the nation's history. Thus the reverse side becomes the anatomical opposite, or "tails."
10 side polygon is called decogon
A house composed of 2 side by side apartments is called a duplex.
partisan
anti-thesis
Accept your side for what it is...your side of the argument. You can plant seeds, but it is up to the other person to investigate this or not.
A statement of a viewpoint supporting one side of an argument is called a position or assertion. It represents the opinion or stance taken by an individual or group in favor of a particular perspective or belief.
It is not meant in the usual meaning of the word. It simply means to present your side of the "argument" to the court. Both you and the oppoosing side of "the argument" present your cases to the court and the judge (or the jury) decide, according to the law, which person "wins" the "argument."
This means you agree with one party in the argument more than the other one. It means you are moving more to one side (ie. one person) rather than the other.
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."
it kind of comes out of the persuasive paragraph but in this case you are persuading the person to believe your side of the story r argument
A person who does not take sides in a dispute but listens to both sides and works to resolve the situation is called an arbitrator. Neutral, moderate "on the fence" or "middle of the road" are all similar ways to describe the person who does not take either side in a dispute.
Well, I guess that would depend on the age of the guest, as well as what kind of favors you are looking to buy. I would buy 12-15, just to be on the safe side. Or, 3 per person, again, depending on what you are looking to buy.
opening argument
protagonist sidekick