1 |
feud1670s, from feud (n.). Related: Feuded; feuding.
|
2 |
feudc. 1300, fede "enmity, hatred, hostility," northern English and Scottish, ultimately (via an unrecorded Old English word or Old French fede, faide "war, raid, hostility, hatred, enmity, [..]
|
3 |
feudto argue or engage in hostilities, especially over long periods of time.
|
4 |
feuda bitter quarrel between two parties carry out a feud; "The two professors have been feuding for years" A feud (referred to in more extreme cases as a blood feud or vendetta [..]
|
5 |
feudA feud is a state of hatred and killing between two groups of people. It is a war by one family or tribe against another. Often a feud can begin when a member of one tribe kills a member of another in [..]
|
6 |
feudFeud means a quarrel or dispute. It is a long and bitter hostility between two families, clans, or individuals.
|
7 |
feud(n) a bitter quarrel between two parties(v) carry out a feud
|
8 |
feudmeaning “hatred,” is the Saxon fæhth (hatred); but feud, a “fief,” is the Teutonic fee-odh (trust-land). (See below.)
|
9 |
feudLasting hostility between two or more people or groups of people.
|
10 |
feud
A state of long-standing mutual hostility.
''You couldn't call it a feud exactly, but there had always been a chill between Phil Mickelson and Tiger Woods.
A staged rivalry between wrestlers.
( [..]
|
<< feudalism | feudal >> |