Ague in a sentence as a noun

Skiddeth bus and sloppeth us, An ague hath my ham.

I'd ague that her version is at the very least syntactically much easier to use.

I would ague having Google paying $10B per year to Apple is hurting Google's revenue more.

One could ague that vertical integration has been their strength up until recently.

Although I agree that the "out of the box" experience is still not great on linux, I would ague that it's much more competitive.

I'd ague that Japan's quality is a bit better than EU but also depends on what food you are used to. Mainly healthy options wise I think Japan stands out even more.

If it is hard to ague against $500M of waste, it surely must be nearly impossible to argue against $250b of yearly, recurring waste, no?

While one may agree or disagree with Sarko, I think the personal history of Mr DSK would ague against this having been a "set-up".

I would ague that guerrilla marketing is standard ops for many new products/services and it should not be perceived in a negative way.

It's as if malaria, flu, bacterial meningitis, and every other infection were called "ague".

But it's hard to ague that it doesn't raise the issue of "you know he was willing to lie on this document that you're trying to use to make investment decisions -- which calls into question the entire document since he's to some degree its 'author'".There is, a system that removes incentives for lying - as CEO he has to certify the contents of these documents, with specific penalties.

Ague definitions

noun

a fit of shivering or shaking

noun

successive stages of chills and fever that is a symptom of malaria

noun

a mark (') placed above a vowel to indicate pronunciation

See also: acute