Con*fute (?), v. t. [imp.
& p. p. Confuted; p. pr. & vb.
n. Confuting.] [L. confutare to chek (a
boiling liquid), to repress, confute; con- + a root seen
in futis a water vessel), prob. akin to fundere to
pour: cf. F. confuter. See Fuse to melt.] To
overwhelm by argument; to refute conclusively; to prove or show
to be false or defective; to overcome; to silence.
Satan stood . . . confuted and
convinced
Of his weak arguing fallacious drift.
Milton.
No man's error can be confuted who doth not
. . . grant some true principle that contradicts his error.
Chillingworth.
I confute a good profession with a bad
conversation.
Fuller.
Syn. -- To disprove; overthrow; sed aside; refute;
oppugn. -- To Confute, Refute. Refute is
literally to and decisive evidence; as, to refute a
calumny, charge, etc. Confute is literally to check
boiling, as when cold water is poured into hot, thus serving to
allay, bring down, or neutralize completely. Hence, as applied to
arguments (and the word is never applied, like refute, to
charges), it denotes, to overwhelm by evidence which puts an end
to the case and leaves an opponent nothing to say; to silence;
as, "the atheist is confuted by the whole structure of
things around him."