feud
IPA: fjˈud
noun
- A state of long-standing mutual hostility.
- (professional wrestling) A staged rivalry between wrestlers.
- (obsolete) A combination of kindred to avenge injuries or affronts, done or offered to any of their blood, on the offender and all his race.
- An estate granted to a vassal by a feudal lord in exchange for service.
verb
- (intransitive) To carry on a feud.
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Examples of "feud" in Sentences
- The people are having a feud.
- The Assassin feuded with the criminal.
- The Undertaker won the match to end the feud.
- The feud has repercussions down the generations.
- A feud erupted between the Beales and the Wickses.
- This began the Cowboy's feud with the Metal Maniac.
- The Levitt-Lott feud is already the stuff of legends.
- The team's biggest feud in the WWF was with The Bushwhackers.
- The goal of the game is to unite the feuding monkey kingdoms.
- The outcome of the battle was inconclusive, and the feud continued.
- This was in accordance with the customs of the medieval feuding ethos.
- This Hatfield and McCoy made-for-media feud is ideally suited for reality TV.
- His real-life on again-off again feud with Hulk Hogan mirrored their wrestling feuds.
- The feud is only one of a bewildering array of rivalries among churchmen in the Holy Sepulcher.
- It's official: The feud is on between the NHL's two biggest stars, and it was on full display Sunday in the Washington Capitals '5-2 victory over the Pittsburgh Penguins.
- Just as in the disputes of individuals the arbitration of a civil court instead of a blood feud is more practical, so, man decides, is arbitration more practical in the disputes of nations.
- My Pollyanna hope for the resolution of the Levitt-Lott feud is that Freedomnomics becomes a best-seller, leading a Solomonic judge to throw out the lawsuit on the grounds that "all publicity is good publicity."
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