Pronunciation: /brɔl/
noun a noisy quarrel or fight
A1 The children got into a brawl over a toy.
A2 The two teams engaged in a heated brawl on the field.
B1 The bar brawl resulted in several injuries and arrests.
B2 The political debate turned into a verbal brawl between the candidates.
C1 The brawl at the concert escalated quickly, leading to chaos in the crowd.
C2 The brawl between rival gangs in the city resulted in a tragic loss of life.
verb to engage in a noisy quarrel or fight
A1 The kids often brawl over toys at the playground.
A2 During the football match, players started to brawl on the field.
B1 The two rival gangs brawled in the street last night.
B2 The heated argument escalated into a full-blown brawl at the bar.
C1 The political protestors brawled with the police during the demonstration.
C2 The two boxers brawled fiercely in the ring, each determined to win.
formal The brawl that broke out at the protest resulted in several injuries.
informal Did you hear about the brawl that went down at the club last night?
slang Things got heated and a brawl erupted between the two groups.
figurative The political debate turned into a verbal brawl as both candidates passionately argued their points.
brawled
brawls
more brawl
most brawl
brawl
will brawl
have brawled
is brawling
brawl
brawl
to brawl
brawling
brawling