English to Urdu Dictionary Brawl

Brawl

جھگڑا
definition
verb
But how can our economy get better if we are always engaged in fighting and brawling with each other?
fight or quarrel in a rough or noisy way.
noun
As a nurse, she had seen victims of bar fights and street brawls , but these wounds were some of the worst she had seen.
a rough or noisy fight or quarrel.
example
There was peace at last and only the infrequent traffic in Wilde Street and a drunken 'brawl' or two outside disturbed the peace of our new home.
a street 'brawl'
The case involved charges arising from a vicious 'brawl' in a sports bar.
It is often a clash of egos with no more interest than a street 'brawl' .
Now what about in an altercation like a pub brawl or a street 'brawl' where someone is bitten?
The camera weaves its way through a motley crew of punk and ‘new wave’ types as they carouse, 'brawl' , and struggle to assert themselves over the noise and chaos.
he'd got into a drunken 'brawl' in a bar
It was easy to turn a drunken 'brawl' into a gunfight.
From her vantage point, however, Em was only given a view of the drunken 'brawl' , which had deteriorated into a hissy fight.
He was able to hold his own in any society and at other times 'brawl' with the roughest of the rough in the bush pubs where he often drank to excess.
Moreover, most murders are committed during the heat of the moment, whilst having blazing arguments with a spouse or during drunken 'brawls' in the pub.
It's much too barbaric and such things are left to bar fights and street 'brawls' .
Binge drinkers and booze-fuelled 'brawlers' who plague Kingston town centre at night face on-the-spot fines in a police crackdown on loutish behaviour.
The proportion of street killings that resulted from drunken 'brawls' plunged by two-thirds between 1875 and 1920.
He was arrested for allegedly 'brawling' with a fan at a show in San Francisco on Tuesday.
And, what is more, the good guys guzzling liquor is a celebrated feature in mainstream cinema and drunken 'brawls' are sometimes necessary ingredients.
They still went about armed even in peacetime, unlike Roman aristocrats in times of empire, and drunken 'brawls' or even complicated feuds might break out at any time.
Cartwright was 'brawling' with another man when officers arrived at the scene and had to be pulled away.
‘Most of the festivals here are just drunken 'brawls' for children,’ she laments.
Yet again, while trying to appeal to the world's most sophisticated market, the impression is of Scots doing what we do best - squabbling and 'brawling' with each other while shocked onlookers avert their gaze.
The two 'brawled' like children fighting over a lollipop.
It would have been utterly ridiculous to eschew the opportunity to double-handed fly-fish the huge and 'brawling' salmon rivers of Swedish Lapland, just for want of the necessary skills.
Early yesterday morning, he was arrested after 'brawling' with two guests at a Brooklyn hotel.
The mother gets through a bottle of vodka a day and yet my friend cannot afford to go back to court, nor can he get legal aid, so he is left watching his innocents bruise as they grow into potential alcoholic 'brawlers' .
A few minutes after the match, they were 'brawling' in the parking lot backstage and the security broke them up.
But, from a taxi driver's point of view, on Easter weekend you could not go round a corner without seeing drunken 'brawls' all over the town.
While hundreds of drunken street 'brawls' take place every weekend across the UK, few of the perpetrators - if any - would want a death on their hands.
But how can our economy get better if we are always engaged in fighting and 'brawling' with each other?
Witnesses told investigators eight to 15 people were 'brawling' with the agents before the agents left without their van.
For three days, two unevenly matched teams have 'brawled' , they have hurled almost everything at each other, and any time one has deigned to take the advantage, the other has clawed it back.
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