0 present participle of feud
1 to have a feud with someone:
They've been feuding with their neighbours for years over a boundary issue.
Clearly, this approach requires enormous understanding between the feuding parties.
Should they instead succumb to internecine feuding and fragmentation, the future will not be as bright.
Prior to the 1590s, he notes, these tended to be small-scale, usually non-violent and frequently involved feuding among the gentry.
The respite in open feuding was only temporary.
By mid-century, a wave of critics was dismissing the theory, reviewing the feuding past with contempt.
In the peace pact ceremony (hidit) the feuding parties met with an arbiter and promised not to fight each other any more.
They helped to sustain patterns of chiefly behaviour, including feasting, feuding and marriage alliances.
Reconciliation between the two feuding sides typically took place before the entire council or individual council members.