brawl

suomi-englanti sanakirja

brawl englannista suomeksi

  1. kahakoida, nujakoida, rähistä

  2. bileet

  3. tappelu, rettelö, riita, rähinä, nujakka

  1. tappelu, nujakka, rähinä

  2. rähistä, räyhätä, nujakoida

brawl englanniksi

  1. A disorderly argument or fight, usually with a large number of people involved.

  2. (synonyms)

  3. (RQ:Shakespeare Romeo and Juliet Q1-2)

  4. (quote-journal)

  5. (quote-book): Hearings before the States House Committee on Energy and Commerce|Committee on Interstate Commerce, (w), Seventy-sixth States Congress|Congress, Third Session on the Nomination of Thad H. Brown on Reappointment as Federal Communications Commissioner(nb...)|location=Washington, D.C.|publisher=States Government Publishing Office|United States Government Printing Office|date=21 June 1940|page=81|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=jPDBkn1FV3EC&pg=PA81|oclc=4200122|passage=It has been reported that an entertainment took place not long ago in a certain "hot spot" in New York City, and it has been charged that members of the (w) were present; that they got into a drunken brawl; and in the brawl some woman was hurt, her arm twisted.

  6. (quote-journal)’: The early reviews|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/26/movies/t2-trainspotting-reviews.html|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20180221171630/https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/26/movies/t2-trainspotting-reviews.html|archivedate=21 February 2018|newspaper=The New York Times|location=New York, N.Y.|publisher=The New York Times Company|date=26 January 2017|issn=0362-4331|oclc=971436363|passage=(w) appears as Begbie, who starts brawls with almost anyone who crosses his path; ...

  7. To engage in a brawl; to fight or quarrel.

  8. (RQ:Shakespeare Richard 3 Q1)

  9. (quote-book)|year=1676|page=43|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=bHI3AAAAMAAJ&pg=PA43|oclc=228722051|passage=Theſe are the deep and profound Myſteries of Artificial Logick, invented with ſo much care by theſe fallacious Doctors, ... Theſe are the Nets, and theſe are the Hounds with which they hunt the Truth of all things, whether natural, as in Phyſicks; or ſupernatural, as in Metaphyſicks: but according to the Proverb of ''Clodius'' and ''Terentius Varro|Varro'', can never overtake, by reaſon of their bawling and brawling one with another.

  10. (quote-book)|year=1716|volume_plain=part I, volume II|year_published=1799|page=417|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/oldnewtestamentc02prid/page/417/mode/1up|oclc=929202903|passage=As long as they &91;(w) and (w), (w)' wives&93; diſagreed, they were continually ſcolding, brawling, or fighting, with each other; and whenever they agreed, they both joined in brawling ''verb sense 2'' at him, and often fell on him with their fiſts as well as with their tongues, and beat him ſoundly.

  11. (quote-book)|location=Glasgow|publisher=Printed for James Thomson,(nb...), and sold by him(nb...), and by J. Trail, W. Gray, and J. Wood,(nb...); and by R. Smith, jun.(nb...)|year=1763|page=305|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=DKlgAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA305|oclc=750606834|passage=Upon every trifle, the vitiated faculties of thy ſoul are inflamed with immoderate and moſt irregular paſſion, ſo that thou often brawleſt, and art made thereby to roar like a wild bull caught in a thicket: ...

  12. (RQ:Dickens Martin Chuzzlewit)

  13. (RQ:Rowling Harry Potter)

  14. To create a disturbance; to complain loudly.

  15. (RQ:Smith York Plays)

  16. (quote-book) By Thomas Colwell|year=c. 1560|oclc=913382015|editor2=John S. Farmer|title2=The Disobedient Child|series2=The Tudor Facsimile Texts|seriesvolume2=42|location2=London; Edinburgh|publisher2=Issued for subscribers by T. C. & E. C. Jack,(nb...)|year2=1908|url2=https://archive.org/details/disobedientchild00inge/page/n120/mode/1up|oclc2=1039484089|passage=She the son's wife is one that is euermore full of ſtryfe / And of all Scolders beareth the Bell. / When ſhe ſpeaketh beſt, ſhe brawleth her tonge / When ſhe is ſtyll ſhe fyghteth apace: / She is an olde Witch thoughe ſhe be yonge, / No mirth with her, no ioye or ſolace.

  17. (RQ:Shakespeare Henry 4-2 Q1)

  18. (RQ:Scott Ivanhoe)

  19. (quote-journal); Oxford, Oxfordshire: J. H. and James Parker; A. R. Mowbray; Cambridge, Cambridgeshire: Hall and Son; Derby, Derbyshire: J. and C. Mozley|month=April|year=1862|volume=XXIV|page=239|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=dBsEAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA239|oclc=5581831|passage=He Samuel Tuke blasphemeth (smallcaps)'s Holy Word, preacheth sedition and rebellion, telleth in the pulpit many foolish lies and ridiculous tales, brawleth against the reverend and learned ministers of the country, and raileth upon the worshipful gentry; ...

  20. Especially of a rapid stream running over stones: to make a loud, confused noise.

  21. (RQ:Shakespeare As You Like It)

  22. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=Printed for Johnson (publisher)|Joseph Johnson,(nb...)|year=1793|oclc=520414306|chapter2=The Female Beggar. From Wordsworth’s Evening Walk.|title2=The Edinburgh Magazine, or Literary Miscellany|location2=Edinburgh|publisher2=Printed for James Symington (...) and sold in London by H. Murray(nb...), and W. Boag(nb...)|year2=May 1794|volume2=III (New Series)|page2=387|pageurl2=https://books.google.com/books?id=S3gEAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA387|column2=1|oclc2=221359700|passage=―When low-hung clouds each ſtar of ſummer hide, / And fireleſs are the valleys far and wide, / Where the brook brawls along the painful road, / Dark with bat haunted aſhes ſtretching broad, ...

  23. (quote-book)|title=The Hunting of Badlewe: A Dramatic Tale|location=London|publisher=Colburn|Henry Colburn; Edinburgh: G. Goldie|year=1814|page=1|oclc=612459984|newversion=quoted in|chapter2=''The Hunting of Badlewe, a Dramatic Tale.'' 8vo. Edin. 1814. the Scottish Review.|title2=Magazine|The Analectic Magazine, Containing Selections from Foreign Reviews and Magazines, together with Original Miscellaneous Compositions|location2=Philadelphia, Pa.|publisher2=Published and sold by Moses Thomas,(nb...)|year2=May 1815|volume2=V (New Series)|pages2=353–354|pageurl2=https://books.google.com/books?id=ClpEAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA353|oclc2=974441451|passage=What seek we here / Amid this waste where desolation scowls, / And the red torrent, brawling down the linn, / Sings everlasting discord?

  24. To pour abuse on; to scold.

  25. To move and fro, to quiver, to shake.

  26. A type of dance move or step.

  27. (alternative form of)

  28. (RQ:Shakespeare Love's Labour's Lost Q1)