0 an argument that has existed for a long time between two people or groups, causing a lot of anger or violence:
1 to have a feud with someone:
They've been feuding with their neighbours for years over a boundary issue.
2 an angry and sometimes violent argument that has continued for a long time between two people, families, or groups:
a feud between two influential families
Seditious words cases cannot all be regarded as drunken indiscretions or developments of private feuds, with witnesses exaggerating or fabricating evidence.
Reconciliation between the two feuding sides typically took place before the entire council or individual council members.
Gelting argues that the purpose of the prohibition was to extend the kin group to which a nobleman owed solidarity, hence making it more difficult to sustain feuds.
We should bear in mind, however, that this ethnic consciousness did not at all preclude ' intra-ethnic ' feuds, which were probably as frequent or even more important than inter-ethnic conflicts.
However, mediation is also applied to victims and offenders, bullying in schools, family feuds, divorce, domestic violence and commercial and industrial disputes.
Let us forget about feuds and narrow political ideas and beliefs, and act.
There is a new complication which is like the religious feuds of the past.
Differentiation of that kind is thoroughly unjust, and it provokes intense feuds and divisions within the family.
中文繁体
夙怨, 世仇, 長期爭鬥…
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夙怨, 世仇, 长期争斗…
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enemistad, enemistad [feminine], pelear…
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rixa, hostilidade…
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kan davası, bitmek bilmeyen husumet…
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querelle [feminine], se quereller, querelle…
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spor (letitý), svár…
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fejde, strid…
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