one who presents a counter argument
one who argues against something just for the sake of arguing, without actually being committed to the views
one who puts forward arguments against a proposition, even if they may actually agree with it, simply to test the validity of the proposition
someone who pretends to be against an idea or plan that many agree with, so that people may discuss it and consider other views
a person who disagrees with others solely for the sake of having a discussion on the issue
I agree with what you say, but I’ll play devil’s advocate so that we can cover all the possibilities that may arise.
He offered to play devil’s advocate and argue against our case so that we could find out any flaws in it.
The schoolmaster often played devil’s advocate with his students so that they could have an interesting discussion and look at other point of views.
The plan is good, but I’ll play devil’s advocate so that we know what the opposition can say.
The defence lawyer played devil’s advocate, explaining that the truth could be the opposite of the way it looked, but the judge wasn’t having it.
If you don’t play devil’s advocate to test your own ideas, you will never know if they stand up to scrutiny.
Playing devil’s advocate to every detail of the plan is the only way to ensure that you anticipate problems before they occur.
I am sick of you playing devil’s advocate with everything I say – you are just doing it to be argumentative.
There is no origin for this idiom
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definition
Common phrase that has a specific meaning.