brawl 的 2 个定义
- a noisy quarrel, squabble, or fight.
- a bubbling or roaring noise; a clamor.
- Slang. a large, noisy party.
- to quarrel angrily and noisily; wrangle.
- to make a bubbling or roaring noise, as water flowing over a rocky bed.
brawl 近义词
nasty fight
fight nastily
更多brawl例句
- The first, held in the Treasury Department building, was massively overcrowded, which led to brawls and thefts at the coat check.
- Ultimately, the day resulted in a bloody brawl that took the lives of both police and protesters, in a security breach unlike any America has seen in decades.
- It’s not the brawl you get outside a bar or the random violence you might get when someone feels frightened.
- Here, you can reconstruct crime scenes, such as a bar brawl.
- Shouting matches became street brawls, leading to at least 34 dead in the protests.
- Good news: so is this grainy TMZ footage of a Bieber/Bloom Ibiza brawl.
- How could it be that this word, and not “what” or “why,” has caused a bare-knuckle brawl at such a stratospheric social level?
- Most recently, Charles Barkley appeared in a cartoon brawl with Godzilla.
- If anyone could have stopped the Everest brawl of April 27, 2013, it was Arnot.
- How excited were those three guys to FINALLY have a legitimate reason to bar brawl?
- A Yankee, whose face had been mauled in a pot-house brawl, assured General Jackson that he had received his scars in battle.
- When about twenty years of age, in a drunken brawl he shot and killed one of his best friends.
- You see, he had called at the bank on the morning of the night of the brawl, and drew what little money he had.
- Gordon was killed the night before sailing—(Mr. Carr had well described it as a drunken brawl)—killed accidentally.
- Brewing in the senior day-room was a mere vulgar brawl, lacking all the refining influences of the study.