brawl / brɔl /

⚽高中词汇争吵斗殴殴打争斗

brawl2 个定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. a noisy quarrel, squabble, or fight.
  2. a bubbling or roaring noise; a clamor.
  3. Slang. a large, noisy party.
v. 无主动词 verb
  1. to quarrel angrily and noisily; wrangle.
  2. to make a bubbling or roaring noise, as water flowing over a rocky bed.

brawl 近义词

n. 名词 noun

nasty fight

v. 动词 verb

fight nastily

更多brawl例句

  1. The first, held in the Treasury Department building, was massively overcrowded, which led to brawls and thefts at the coat check.
  2. 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.
  3. It’s not the brawl you get outside a bar or the random violence you might get when someone feels frightened.
  4. Here, you can reconstruct crime scenes, such as a bar brawl.
  5. Shouting matches became street brawls, leading to at least 34 dead in the protests.
  6. Good news: so is this grainy TMZ footage of a Bieber/Bloom Ibiza brawl.
  7. How could it be that this word, and not “what” or “why,” has caused a bare-knuckle brawl at such a stratospheric social level?
  8. Most recently, Charles Barkley appeared in a cartoon brawl with Godzilla.
  9. If anyone could have stopped the Everest brawl of April 27, 2013, it was Arnot.
  10. How excited were those three guys to FINALLY have a legitimate reason to bar brawl?
  11. A Yankee, whose face had been mauled in a pot-house brawl, assured General Jackson that he had received his scars in battle.
  12. When about twenty years of age, in a drunken brawl he shot and killed one of his best friends.
  13. You see, he had called at the bank on the morning of the night of the brawl, and drew what little money he had.
  14. Gordon was killed the night before sailing—(Mr. Carr had well described it as a drunken brawl)—killed accidentally.
  15. Brewing in the senior day-room was a mere vulgar brawl, lacking all the refining influences of the study.