brawl


تلفظ آنلاین504 vocabulary

brawl /brɔːl $ brɒːl/ noun [countable]
brawl verb [intransitive]

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brawl
[noun]
Synonyms:
- fight, affray (Law), altercation, clash, dispute, fracas, fray, melee or mêlée, punch-up (Brit. informal), rumpus, scuffle, skirmish
[verb]
Synonyms:
- fight, scrap (informal), scuffle, tussle, wrestle
Related Idioms: a coming to blows, exchange of blows
Related Words: fistfight, fisticuffs, slugfest, struggle, tussle, conflict, contention, contest, riot, altercation, embroilment, imbroglio, quarrel, wrangle, commotion, disturbance, eruption, hubbub, pandemonium, ruckus, rumpus, turn-to, turnup, upheaval, uproar, incident, rumble
English Thesaurus: fight, battle, scuffle, punch-up, brawl, ...

[TahlilGaran] English Synonym Dictionary

I. brawl1 /brɔːl $ brɒːl/ noun [countable]
[Date: 1300-1400; Origin: Perhaps from the sound of fighting]
a noisy quarrel or fight among a group of people, especially in a public place:
a drunken brawl in the street

[TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English

II. brawl2 verb [intransitive]
to quarrel or fight in a noisy way, especially in a public place:
Fans brawled outside the stadium.
—brawler noun [countable]

[TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English

brawl
noun
ADJ. drunken | bar-room, pub, street | mass
VERB + BRAWL provoke, spark, start | be/become/get involved in, be/get caught up in, get into
PREP. in a/the ~ They got caught up in a street brawl.
~ between a brawl between different gangs of football supporters.
~ over a brawl over a woman

[TahlilGaran] Collocations Dictionary

fight a situation in which people hit or attack each other because of an argument, or as a sport:
He had a fight with an older boy.
the famous fight between Muhammad Ali and George Foreman
battle a fight between opposing armies or groups of people:
The English king was killed at the Battle of Hastings.
a battle between two rival gangs
scuffle a short fight that is not very violent:
There was a short scuffle with the police, but no arrests were made.
punch-up British English informal a fight in which people hit each other because of an argument:
The game turned into a punch-up.
brawl a noisy fight between a group of people:
He was hurt in a drunken brawl.
altercation formal a short noisy argument or fight, especially one that is not serious:
There was a brief altercation and someone called the police.
riot a fight involving a large number of people, especially people who are protesting about something:
The book provoked riots all over Europe.
campaign a planned series of actions intended to achieve something:
Motoring organizations started a campaign for safer roads.
struggle a long, hard fight for freedom, independence, equal rights etc:
Nkrumah led the people in their struggle for independence.
crusade someone’s fight against something they think is morally wrong:
She intends to continue her crusade against sex and violence on TV.

[TahlilGaran] English Thesaurus

fight a situation in which people hit or attack each other because of an argument, or as a sport:
He had a fight with an older boy.
the famous fight between Muhammad Ali and George Foreman
battle a fight between opposing armies or groups of people:
The English king was killed at the Battle of Hastings.
a battle between two rival gangs
scuffle a short fight that is not very violent:
There was a short scuffle with the police, but no arrests were made.
punch-up British English informal a fight in which people hit each other because of an argument:
The game turned into a punch-up.
brawl a noisy fight between a group of people:
He was hurt in a drunken brawl.
altercation formal a short noisy argument or fight, especially one that is not serious:
There was a brief altercation and someone called the police.
riot a fight involving a large number of people, especially people who are protesting about something:
The book provoked riots all over Europe.
protest to do something to show publicly that you disagree with something – used especially when a large group of people do this together:
Huge crowds gathered in the capital protesting against the war.
Drivers blocked roads around the capital to protest about the rising cost of fuel.
march to walk in a large group from one place to another in order to protest about something:
Hundreds of students marched through the city in protest against the employment laws.
demonstrate to walk or stand somewhere in a large group, in order to protest about something:
About 200 people were demonstrating outside the US Embassy.
Environmentalists have been demonstrating against plans to dump waste at sea.
boycott to protest about the actions of a company, country, or industry by refusing to buy something, or refusing to go to a place or event:
They may boycott the next Olympic Games.
Shoppers are boycotting battery-farmed eggs.
hold/stage a sit-in to protest by refusing to leave a place:
The students have been staging a sit-in to protest about overcrowding at the polytechnic.
go on a hunger strike (also go on hunger strike British English) to protest by refusing to eat:
Maynard went on a hunger strike to protest his innocence.

[TahlilGaran] English Thesaurus


TahlilGaran Online Dictionary ver 18.0
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TahlilGaran : دیکشنری آنلاین تحلیلگران ( معنی brawl ) | علیرضا معتمد , دیکشنری تحلیلگران , وب اپلیکیشن , تحلیلگران , دیکشنری , آنلاین , آیفون , IOS , آموزش مجازی 4.36 : 2134
4.36دیکشنری آنلاین تحلیلگران ( معنی brawl )
دیکشنری تحلیلگران (وب اپلیکیشن، ویژه کاربران آیفون، IOS) | دیکشنری آنلاین تحلیلگران ( معنی brawl ) | موسس و مدیر مسئول :