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clash with

/klash/US // klæʃ //UK // (klæʃ) //

冲撞,相撞,冲突,相互冲突

Related Words

Definitions

v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to make a loud, harsh noise: The gears of the old car clashed and grated.
    • : to come together or collide, especially noisily: The cymbals clashed.
    • : to conflict; disagree: Their stories of the accident clashed completely.
    • : to be offensive to the eye.
    • : to engage in a physical conflict or contest, as in a game or a battle: The Yankees clash with the White Sox for the final game of the season.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to strike with a resounding or violent collision: He clashed his fist against the heavy door.
    • : to produce by or as by collision: The tower bell clashed its mournful note.
n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a loud, harsh noise, as of a collision: The automobiles collided with a terrible clash.
    • : a collision, especially a noisy one.
    • : a conflict; opposition, especially of views or interests: a clash between nations.
    • : a battle, fight, or skirmish: The clash between the border patrols left three men dead.

Synonyms & Antonyms

as indiffer

Examples

  • Because of a procedural clash between Democrats who control the legislature and the Republican minority, the regular session was kept to 30 days instead of the customary 46 for an odd-numbered year.

  • There’s actually a culture clash here, where fundamentally the communication always will be broken, because the scientist has been trained not to give an answer, and the decision-maker’s only job is to provide one.

  • The clash between the night sky and the infinite universe became known as Olber’s paradox, named after Heinrich Olber, an astronomer who popularized it in 1826.

  • This tranquility appears to have emerged only after a gladiatorial period of planetary clashes—one in which titans ricocheted off each other, perhaps ejecting at least one rival sibling from the cosmic arena altogether.

  • You’re an expert on political media, and the thing that I find so strange about this clash is that it’s not really an ideological battle.

  • Linsker initially escaped after the clash on the bridge but was arrested a short time later.

  • A cynical old Chicago lawyer once described this as the theory that “out of the clash of lies, truth will emerge.”

  • But it also sharpens the clash between two very ways of approaching history.

  • But he never makes any clash we have public, and he calms me down a lot as well.

  • Soon after that his clash with Ben Affleck, who nearly blew a gasket, sparked a national debate over Islam.

  • He and Mathieson p. 66did not always agree, and the clash of arms frequently raged between them.

  • While this clash was going forward between the rancher and Clip, Matt's mind had been busy.

  • So far my official duties did not clash with this work, and I could remain in the Ministry of Justice.

  • Just then the clash of the luncheon bell was heard, and Haggard gave his wife his arm.

  • He heard the clash of levers thrown sharply over in that distant ship; his own hands were frozen to the controls.