fight - Wiktionary, the free dictionary (original) (raw)
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Fight (brawl)
From Middle English fighten (“to fight”), from Old English feohtan (“to fight, combat, strive”), from Proto-West Germanic *fehtan (“to fight”), from Proto-Germanic *fehtaną (“to comb, tease, shear, struggle with”), from Proto-Indo-European *peḱ- (“to comb, shear”).
Cognate with Scots fecht (“to fight”), West Frisian fjochtsje, fjuchte (“to fight”), Dutch vechten (“to fight”), Low German fechten (“to fight”), German fechten (“to fight, fence”), Danish fægte (“to fence, to fight (using blade weapons)”), Norwegian Bokmål and Norwegian Nynorsk fekte (“to fence”), Swedish fäkta (“to fence, to fight (using blade weapons), to wave vigorously (and carelessly) with one's arms”), Latin pectō (“comb, thrash”, verb), Albanian pjek (“to hit, strive, fight”), Ancient Greek πέκω (pékō, “comb or card wool”, verb). Related also to Old English feht (“wool, shaggy pelt, fleece”).
- (Received Pronunciation) enPR: fīt, IPA(key): /faɪt/
- (US, Canada) IPA(key): /fəɪt/, [fəɪʔ]
- (Canadian raising) IPA(key): [fʌɪt]
- (General Australian) IPA(key): /fɑɪt/
- Rhymes: -aɪt
fight (third-person singular simple present fights, present participle fighting, simple past fought, past participle fought or (archaic) foughten)
- Senses relating to physical conflict:
- (transitive) To engage in combat with; to oppose physically, to contest with.
My grandfather fought the Nazis in World War II. - (transitive) To conduct or engage in (battle, warfare, a cause, etc.).
Our soldiers fought the battle just over that hill.- 1712 (date written), [Joseph] Addison, Cato, a Tragedy. […], London: […] J[acob] Tonson, […], published 1713, →OCLC, Act I, scene i, page 2:
His Suff’rings ſhine, and ſpread a Glory round him;
Greatly unfortunate, he fights the Cauſe
Of Honour, Virtue, Liberty, and Rome. - 1856 December, [Thomas Babington] Macaulay, “Samuel Johnson”, in T[homas] F[lower] E[llis], editor, The Miscellaneous Writings and Speeches of Lord Macaulay, new edition, London: Longman, Green, Reader, & Dyer, published 1871, →OCLC:
was left to fight his way through the world.
- 1712 (date written), [Joseph] Addison, Cato, a Tragedy. […], London: […] J[acob] Tonson, […], published 1713, →OCLC, Act I, scene i, page 2:
- (intransitive) To contend in physical conflict, either singly or in war, battle, etc.
A wounded animal will fight tooth and nail; relentless, savage and murderous. - (reciprocal) To contend in physical conflict with each other, either singly or in war, battle, etc.
The two boxers have been fighting for more than half an hour. - (causative) To cause to fight; to manage or manoeuvre in a fight.
- 1953, Revd. Waldo E. L. Smith, What Time the Tempest: An Army Chaplain's Story, page 244:
And so we made their grave where they should lie
Close side by side, as they had fought their tank
Through every fight, arm touching arm.
We made it deep, that nothing of the conflict they had left above
Should break into their peace.
to fight cocks; to fight one’s ship
- 1953, Revd. Waldo E. L. Smith, What Time the Tempest: An Army Chaplain's Story, page 244:
- (transitive) To engage in combat with; to oppose physically, to contest with.
- (intransitive) To strive for something; to campaign or contend for success.
He fought for the Democrats in the last election.- 1913, Joseph C[rosby] Lincoln, chapter VII, in Mr. Pratt’s Patients, New York, N.Y.; London: D[aniel] Appleton and Company, →OCLC:
Old Applegate, in the stern, just set and looked at me, and Lord James, amidship, waved both arms and kept hollering for help. I took a couple of everlasting big strokes and managed to grab hold of the skiff's rail, close to the stern. Then, for a jiffy, I hung on and fought for breath. - 2014 July 5, “Freedom fighter”, in The Economist, volume 412, number 8894:
[Edmund] Burke continued to fight for liberty later on in life. He backed Americans in their campaign for freedom from British taxation. He supported Catholic freedoms and freer trade with Ireland, in spite of his constituents’ ire. He wanted more liberal laws on the punishment of debtors.
- 1913, Joseph C[rosby] Lincoln, chapter VII, in Mr. Pratt’s Patients, New York, N.Y.; London: D[aniel] Appleton and Company, →OCLC:
- (transitive) To try to overpower; to fiercely counteract.
The government pledged to fight corruption.- 2014, Ann Aguirre, The Shape of My Heart, page 42:
I fought a sneeze as Max took my hand and led me into the chapel.
- 2014, Ann Aguirre, The Shape of My Heart, page 42:
- (intransitive) Of colours or other design elements: to clash; to fail to harmonize.
- 2013, Ian G. Clifton, Android User Interface Design:
The higher the saturation, the more the colors fight, and the more users will be looking at your design instead of your content.
- 2013, Ian G. Clifton, Android User Interface Design:
The reciprocal sense of "fight" is a common elision of the phrase "fight each other", since context provides the meaning. "Each other" is commonly used with other verbs for an explicit reciprocal sense.
The reciprocal sense of "fight", which refers to two entities fighting each other, contrasts with the reflexive sense of the word "infight", which refers to entities of a group fighting each other.
See also Thesaurus:fight
Sranan Tongo: feti
(intransitive) to contend in physical conflict
- Afrikaans: stryd (af)
- Aghwan: 𐔽𐔰𐕀 (ˁax)
- Albanian: luftoj (sq)
- Amharic: መዋጋት (mäwagat)
- Arabic: عَارَكَ (ʕāraka), قَاتَلَ (ar) (qātala)
Egyptian Arabic: اِتعارك (etʕārek)
Hijazi Arabic: اتضارب (atḍārab)
Iraqi Arabic: تمالخ (tmālaḵ)
Moroccan Arabic: تدابز (tdabəz) - Aramaic:
Syriac: ܟܬܫ (kθaš) - Armenian: կռվել (hy) (kṙvel)
- Aromanian: alumtu
- Assamese: যুঁজা (zũza)
- Asturian: lluchar (ast)
- Azerbaijani: döyüşmək (az), vuruşmaq (az), çarpışmaq (az), dalaşmaq
- Basque: borrokatu, borroka egin
- Belarusian: бі́цца impf (bícca), змага́цца impf (zmahácca), ваява́ць (be) impf (vajavácʹ), баро́цца impf (barócca)
- Bulgarian: боря́ се (bg) impf (borjá se), би́я се (bg) impf (bíja se)
- Burmese: ရန်ဖြစ် (my) (ranhprac)
- Catalan: lluitar (ca), barallar-se (ca)
- Chechen: please add this translation if you can
- Chickasaw: ittafama
- Chinese:
Cantonese: 打交 (yue) (daa2 gaau1)
Eastern Min: (please verify) 相伐 (soung pa)
Mandarin: 鬥爭 / 斗争 (zh) (dòuzhēng), 戰鬥 / 战斗 (zh) (zhàndòu), 奮鬥 / 奋斗 (zh) (fèndòu) - Czech: bojovat (cs), zápasit, bít se (cs)
- Danish: slås, kæmpe
- Dutch: strijden (nl), vechten (nl), kampen (nl)
- Egyptian: (ꜥḥꜣ)
- Esperanto: batali
- Estonian: (without weapons) kaklema, (with weapons) võitlema
- Finnish: (without weapons) tapella (fi), (with weapons) taistella (fi)
- French: se battre (fr), guerroyer (fr) in war
- Frisian:
North Frisian: (Föhr-Amrum) stridj
West Frisian: fjochtsje - Galician: loitar (gl), lear (gl), punar, estalifar, derrancar (gl), pelexar (gl), gurrar (gl), dedolar, desortir, barallar (gl)
- Georgian: ბრძოლა (brʒola), შებრძოლება (šebrʒoleba), ჩხუბი (čxubi)
- German: kämpfen (de), fechten (de), streiten (de) (archaic)
- Gothic: 𐍅𐌴𐌹𐌷𐌰𐌽 (weihan)
- Greek: παλεύω (el) (palévo), μάχομαι (el) (máchomai), πολεμάω (el) (polemáo)
Ancient Greek: μάχομαι (mákhomai) - Haitian Creole: lite
- Hawaiian: hakakā, paio, kaua
- Hebrew: רָב (he) (rav), נֶאֱבַק (he) (ne'evák), נִלְחַם (he) (nilkhám)
- Hindi: लड़ना (hi) (laṛnā), झगड़ना (hi) (jhagaṛnā)
- Hmong:
White Hmong: please add this translation if you can - Hungarian: harcol (hu), verekszik (hu)
- Icelandic: slást (is), berjast (is)
- Indonesian: kelahi (id), tarung (id)
- Inuktitut:
Inuttitut: pâk - Irish: troid, comhraic, bruíon
- Italian: lottare (it), azzuffarsi (it), battersi (it)
- Japanese: 喧嘩する (ja) (けんかする, kenka suru), 対決する (ja) (たいけつする, taiketsu suru), 戦う (ja) (たたかう, tatakau), 闘う (ja) (たたかう, tatakau)
- Jeju: 쌉다 (ssapda), ᄃᆞ투다 (dawtuda)
- Kabuverdianu: briga, brigá
- Kashmiri: لَڑُن (laḍun)
- Kazakh: төбелесу (töbelesu), ұрысу (ūrysu), күресу (küresu), соғысу (soğysu)
- Khmer: វាយតប់ (viəy tɑp)
- Kituba: nwana
- Korean: 다투다 (ko) (datuda), 싸우다 (ko) (ssauda)
- Kurdish:
Central Kurdish: شەڕ کردن (şerr kirdin) - Kyrgyz: согушуу (ky) (soguşuu), урушуу (ky) (uruşuu)
- Lao: ຕໍ່ສູ້ (tǭ sū), ຮົບ (hop), ສູ້ (sū)
- Latgalian: sistīs, ceikstētīs, veiktīs
- Latin: pugnō, dīmicō, luctor
- Latvian: cīnīties (lv), kauties
- Lingala: bunda
- Lithuanian: kautis, muštis (lt), peštis, grumtis
- Low German:
German Low German: strieden, fechten, kämpen - Lü: please add this translation if you can
- Macedonian: се бори impf (se bori)
- Maltese: ġlieda
- Māori: kakari, whawhai
- Marathi: लढणे (laḍhṇe), लढा देणे (laḍhā deṇe), झुंजणे (jhuñjṇe), झुंज देणे (jhuñja deṇe)
- Middle English: fighten
- Mongolian: тэмцэх (mn) (temcex)
- Naga:
Khiamniungan Naga: vèi-īe - Neapolitan: luttà
- Nepali: लड्नु (laḍnu)
- Norman: s'freûler (Jersey)
- Norwegian: slåss (no), kjempe (no)
- Occitan: luchar (oc)
- Odia: please add this translation if you can
- Old East Slavic: боротися impf (borotisja)
- Old English: feohtan
- Oromo: loluu
- Persian: مبارزه کردن (fa) (mobâreze kardan), جنگیدن (fa) (jangidan)
- Polish: walczyć (pl) impf, bić się (pl) impf
- Portuguese: lutar (pt) com, contra (pt)
- Romanian: lupta (ro), se bate (ro)
- Romansh: lutgar
- Russian: дра́ться (ru) impf (drátʹsja), би́ться (ru) impf (bítʹsja), боро́ться (ru) impf (borótʹsja) (wrestle), сража́ться (ru) impf (sražátʹsja) (in a duel or battle), воева́ть (ru) impf (vojevátʹ)
- Sanskrit: युध्यते (sa) (yudhyate)
- Scots: fecht
- Scottish Gaelic: cog, sabaid
- Serbo-Croatian:
Cyrillic: борити се impf
Latin: boriti se (sh) impf - Shan: please add this translation if you can
- Sinhalese: please add this translation if you can
- Slovak: bojovať impf, biť sa
- Slovene: boriti se impf
- Sorbian:
Lower Sorbian: wójowaś - Spanish: pelear (es), luchar (es), batirse (es), hacer armas
- Sundanese: tarung (su)
- Swahili: vita (sw)
- Swedish: strida (sv), slåss (sv), kämpa (sv)
- Tagalog: awayin, warlahin
- Tajik: ҷангидан (jangidan), мубориза кардан (muboriza kardan), мубориза бурдан (tg) (muboriza burdan)
- Thai: สู้ (th) (sûu), ต่อสู้ (th) (dtɔ̀ɔ-sûu), รบ (th) (róp)
- Tibetan: འཛིང ('dzing), འཁྲུག ('khrug), འཁྲུག་རྩོད་རྒྱག ('khrug rtsod rgyag), རྒྱ་འདྲེ་རྒྱག (rgya 'dre rgyag)
- Tocharian B: wät-
- Tok Pisin: paitim
- Tooro: -rwana
- Turkish: savaşmak (tr), dövüşmek (tr)
- Turkmen: uruşmak
- Tuvan: демисежир (demisejir)
- Udi: аъхъеъсун (a̱qe̱sun)
- Ukrainian: би́тися (uk) impf (býtysja); боро́тися (uk) impf (borótysja), воюва́ти impf (vojuváty)
- Urdu: لڑنا (laṛnā), جھگڑنا (jhagaṛnā)
- Uyghur: يېغىلاشماق (yëghilashmaq), كۈرەشمەك (küreshmek)
- Uzbek: urushmoq (uz), kurashmoq (uz)
- Vietnamese: chiến đấu (vi)
- Welsh: brwydro (cy)
- Yakut: охсуо (oqsuo)
- Yiddish: קעמפֿן (kemfn)
- Yoruba: jà
- Zealandic: vechte
- Zhuang: hoenx
to strive for
- Arabic: نَاضَلَ (nāḍala), كَافَحَ (ar) (kāfaḥa)
- Azerbaijani: döyüşmək (az), vuruşmaq (az), çarpışmaq (az)
- Basque: borrokatu, borroka egin
- Czech: bojovat (cs)
- Dutch: opkomen (nl) voor (nl), ijveren (nl) voor
- Finnish: taistella (fi), tsempata (fi)
- Galician: loitar (gl)
- German: kämpfen (de)
- Hebrew: נאבק (he) (ne'evák)
- Hungarian: harcol (hu)
- Icelandic: berjast (is)
- Italian: combattere (it)
- Japanese: 戦う (ja) (たたかう, tatakau), 闘う (ja) (たたかう, tatakau)
- Khmer: តស៊ូ (km) (tɑɑ suu)
- Latvian: cīnīties (lv)
- Middle English: fighten
- Norwegian: kjempe for
- Persian: تلاش کردن (fa) (talâš kardan)
- Portuguese: lutar (pt)
- Russian: боро́ться (ru) impf (borótʹsja), сража́ться (ru) impf (sražátʹsja)
- Spanish: luchar (es)
- Swahili: vita (sw)
- Thai: สู้ (th) (sûu), ต่อสู้ (th) (dtɔ̀ɔ-sûu)
(transitive) to engage in (a physical conflict)
- Bangi: buna
- Bulgarian: сражавам се (sražavam se)
- Chickasaw: ittafama
- Czech: bojovat (cs)
- Dutch: uitvechten (nl)
- Finnish: taistella (fi)
- Galician: loitar (gl)
- Hebrew: נלחם (he) (nilkhám)
- Hungarian: verekszik (hu)
- Icelandic: heyja
- Japanese: 戦う (ja) (たたかう, tatakau), 闘う (ja) (たたかう, tatakau)
- Kabuverdianu: briga, brigá
- Lingala: buna
- Māori: āpiti (at close quarters)
- Norwegian: slåss (no)
- Persian: جنگیدن (fa) (jangidan)
- Portuguese: lutar (pt)
- Russian: би́ться (ru) impf (bítʹsja), сража́ться (ru) impf (sražátʹsja)
- Scottish Gaelic: cog, sabaid
- Swahili: vita (sw)
- Thai: สู้ (th) (sûu), ต่อสู้ (th) (dtɔ̀ɔ-sûu)
- Tibetan: འཛིང ('dzing), དཀྲུག (dkrug), འཁྲུག་རྩོད་རྒྱག ('khrug rtsod rgyag), རྒྱ་འདྲེ་རྒྱག (rgya 'dre rgyag)
(transitive) to contend in physical conflict against
- Arabic: عَارَكَ (ʕāraka), قَاتَلَ (ar) (qātala)
- Armenian: մարտնչել (hy) (martnčʻel)
- Basque: borrokatu, borroka egin
- Belarusian: ваява́ць (be) impf (vajavácʹ)
- Bulgarian: бия се (bija se)
- Catalan: combatre (ca)
- Chickasaw: ittafama
- Comorian:
Ngazidja Comorian: uwana na - Czech: bojovat (cs)
- Danish: udkæmpe
- Dutch: vechten (nl) tegen (nl), vechten met (nl), bevechten (nl)
- Estonian: sõdima
- Finnish: taistella (fi)
- French: combattre (fr)
Old French: batre, cumbatre - Galician: combatir
- Georgian: შებრძოლება (šebrʒoleba), შერკინება (šerḳineba)
- German: kämpfen (de) gegen (de), kämpfen (de) mit (de)
- Greek: πολεμώ (el) (polemó)
- Hebrew: נאבק (he) (ne'evák), נלחם (he) (nilkhám)
- Icelandic: berjast (is) við (is)
- Irish: troid
- Italian: combattere (it)
- Japanese: 対決する (ja) (たいけつする, taiketsu suru), 戦う (ja) (たたかう, tatakau), 闘う (ja) (たたかう, tatakau)
- Khmer: ប្រយុទ្ឋ (prɑɑyutthɑɑ)
- Korean: 싸우다 (ko) (ssauda)
- Latin: combattuo
- Latvian: cīnīties (lv)
- Lithuanian: kovoti (lt), kautis
- Mongolian: тэмцэх (mn) (temcex), байлдах (mn) (bajldax)
- Norwegian: slåss (no)
- Occitan: batre (oc), combatre (oc)
- Persian: جنگیدن (fa) (jangidan)
- Portuguese: combater (pt), lutar (pt)
- Romanian: combate (ro)
- Romansh: cumbatter
- Russian: би́ться (ru) impf (bítʹsja), сража́ться (ru) impf (sražátʹsja), воева́ть (ru) impf (vojevátʹ)
- Scottish Gaelic: cog, sabaid
- Spanish: combatir (es)
- Swahili: vita (sw)
- Thai: ต่อสู้ (th) (dtɔ̀ɔ-sûu)
- Tok Pisin: paitim
- Ukrainian: воюва́ти impf (vojuváty)
to counteract
- Armenian: պայքարել (hy) (paykʻarel)
- Basque: aurka egin
- Czech: bojovat (cs)
- Danish: bekæmpe
- Dutch: bevechten (nl), bekampen (nl)
- Estonian: võitlema
- Finnish: taistella (fi)
- French: combattre (fr)
- German: bekämpfen (de)
- Greek: καταπολεμώ (el) (katapolemó)
- Hebrew: נאבק (he) (ne'evák), נלחם (he) (nilkhám)
- Icelandic: berjast (is) gegn (is)
- Italian: (please verify) lottare contro (it)
- Japanese: 戦う (ja), 闘う (ja) (たたかう, tatakau)
- Lao: ຕໍ່ສູ້ (tǭ sū)
- Latin: pugnare
- Middle English: fighten
- Norwegian: bekjempe
- Persian: مقابله کردن (fa) (moqâbele kardan)
- Polish: walczyć (pl)
- Portuguese: lutar contra, combater (pt), enfrentar (pt)
- Russian: би́ться (ru) impf (bítʹsja), сража́ться (ru) impf (sražátʹsja)
- Swahili: vita (sw)
- Swedish: bekämpa (sv)
- Thai: ต่อสู้ (th) (dtɔ̀ɔ-sûu)
From Middle English fight, feyght, fiȝt, fecht, from Old English feoht, ġefeoht (“fight”), from Proto-West Germanic *fehtan (“to fight”), from Proto-Germanic *fehtą, *gafehtą (“fight, struggle”), from Proto-Germanic *fehtaną (“to struggle with”). Cognate with Dutch gevecht (“fight”), German Gefecht (“fight”).
fight (countable and uncountable, plural fights)
- An occasion of fighting.
One of them got stuck in a chokehold and got stabbed to death during the fight. - (archaic) A battle between opposing armies.
- A physical confrontation or combat between two or more people or groups.
Watch your language! Are you looking for a fight? - (sports) A boxing or martial arts match.
I’m going to Nick’s to watch the big fight tomorrow night. - A conflict, possibly nonphysical, with opposing ideas or forces; strife.
I’ll put up a fight to save this company.- 1963, Margery Allingham, chapter 18, in The China Governess: A Mystery, London: Chatto & Windus, →OCLC:
‘Then the father has a great fight with his terrible conscience,’ said Munday with granite seriousness. ‘Should he make a row with the police […] ? Or should he say nothing about it and condone brutality for fear of appearing in the newspapers? - 2013 August 10, “A new prescription”, in The Economist, volume 408, number 8848:
As the world's drug habit shows, governments are failing in their quest to monitor every London window-box and Andean hillside for banned plants. But even that Sisyphean task looks easy next to the fight against synthetic drugs.
- 1963, Margery Allingham, chapter 18, in The China Governess: A Mystery, London: Chatto & Windus, →OCLC:
- (uncountable) The will or ability to fight.
That little guy has a bit of fight in him after all. As soon as he saw the size of his opponent, all the fight went out of him. - (obsolete) A screen for the combatants in ships; an arming.
- 1673 May (first performance), John Dryden, Amboyna. A Tragedy. […], London: […] T[homas] N[ewcomb] for Henry Herringman, […], published 1673, →OCLC, Act III, page 31:
Who ever ſaw a noble ſight, / That never view'd a brave Sea Fight: / Hang up your bloody Colours in the Aire, / Up with your Fights, and your Nettings prepare, / Your Merry Mates chear, with a luſty bold ſpright, / Now each Man his brindice, and then to the Fight, […]
- 1673 May (first performance), John Dryden, Amboyna. A Tragedy. […], London: […] T[homas] N[ewcomb] for Henry Herringman, […], published 1673, →OCLC, Act III, page 31:
See also Thesaurus:fight
Sranan Tongo: feti
- → Dutch: fittie
→ Japanese: ファイト (faito)
occasion of fighting
- Afrikaans: geveg
- Albanian: luftë (sq) f
- Arabic: قِتَال m (qitāl)
Gulf Arabic: هوشة f (hōša)
Hijazi Arabic: مُضاربة f (muḍāraba)
South Levantine Arabic: طوشة f (ṭōše), هوشة f (hōše), قِتَال m (qitāl) - Armenian: կռիվ (hy) (kṙiv)
- Aromanian: alumtã f, ljuftã f, lumtã
- Asturian: llucha (ast) f
- Avar: рагъ (rağ)
- Azerbaijani: dalaşma, dava (az)
- Basque: borroka, borrokaldi
- Belarusian: бо́йка f (bójka), бой m (boj), суты́чка f (sutýčka)
- Bulgarian: бой (bg) m (boj), сраже́ние (bg) n (sražénie), би́тка (bg) f (bítka)
- Catalan: lluita (ca) f, combat (ca) m
- Chinese:
Mandarin: 鬥爭 / 斗争 (zh) (dòuzhēng), 戰鬥 / 战斗 (zh) (zhàndòu) - Czech: boj (cs) m, rvačka (cs) f, bitka f
- Danish: kamp (da)
- Dutch: gevecht (nl) n
- Esperanto: batalo (eo)
- Finnish: taistelu (fi), tappelu (fi)
- French: lutte (fr) f, combat (fr) m
- Galician: loita (gl) f
- German: Kampf (de) m
- Greek:
Ancient Greek: μάχη f (mákhē) - Haitian Creole: lit, lalit
- Hebrew: קְרָב (he) m (kráv), לְחִימָה (he) f (l'khimá), ריב (he) m (rív), מַאֲבָק (he) m (ma'avák)
- Hmong:
White Hmong: please add this translation if you can - Hungarian: küzdelem (hu)
- Icelandic: slagur m, bardagi (is) m
- Ingrian: tappelo, kähäkkä
- Irish: troid f
- Italian: lotta (it) f, incontro (it) m
- Japanese: 戦い (ja) (たたかい, tatakai)
- Jeju: 싸움 (ssaum)
- Kashmiri: لَڑٲے (laḍạ̄y), جٔگڑٕ (jạgḍụ)
- Khmer: ជំលោះ (cumlŭəh), ព្យតិហារ (km) (pyĕəʼtehaa)
- Korean: 싸움 (ko) (ssaum)
- Kurdish:
Central Kurdish: شەڕ (ckb) (şerr) - Latin: pugna (la)
- Latvian: cīņa f, kauja (lv) f
- Lithuanian: kova (lt) f, muštynės pl, grumtynės pl
- Macedonian: бој m (boj)
- Manchu: ᠠᡶᠠᠨ (afan)
- Marathi: लढाई f (laḍhāī)
- Mongolian:
Cyrillic: тулаан (mn) (tulaan) - Nepali: झगडा (jhagaḍā), लडाईं (laḍāīṃ)
- Norman: bastaude f, frip'sie f
- Norwegian:
Bokmål: slåsskamp (no) m - Occitan: lucha (oc) f
- Old English: ġefeoht n
- Persian: کارزار (fa) (kârzâr)
- Pijin: faet
- Polish: bójka (pl) f, bój (pl) m, bitwa (pl) f
- Portuguese: luta (pt) f, briga (pt) f
- Romanian: luptă (ro) f, bătaie (ro)
- Romansh: (military) cumbat m, cumbata f, (sport) lutga f
- Russian: дра́ка (ru) f (dráka) (scuffle), бой (ru) m (boj), сты́чка (ru) f (stýčka) (skirmish)
- Sanskrit: युद्ध (sa) n (yuddha)
- Scottish Gaelic: cogadh m, sabaid f, còmhrag f
- Slovak: boj m
- Spanish: lucha (es) f, socaliña (es) f
- Swahili: vita (sw)
- Tajik: корзор (tg) (korzor)
- Tarifit: amenɣi m
- Thai: การต่อสู้ (th) (gaan-dtɔ̀ɔ-sûu)
- Tibetan: འཁྲུག་རྩོད ('khrug rtsod), འཐབ་འཁྲུག ('thab 'khrug), འཐབ་འཛིང ('thab 'dzing)
- Tok Pisin: pait
- Ukrainian: бі́йка (uk) f (bíjka), бій (uk) m (bij), сути́чка f (sutýčka)
- Venetan: lòta f
- Yiddish: קאַמף m (kamf)
- Yoruba: ìjà
- Zhuang: please add this translation if you can
battle
- Afrikaans: geveg
- Albanian: betejë (sq) f
- Arabic: مَعْرَكَة (maʕraka)
- Armenian: մարտ (hy) (mart)
- Azerbaijani: döyüş (az)
- Basque: gudu, bataila
- Belarusian: бі́тва f (bítva), бой m (boj), змага́нне n (zmahánnje), бата́лія f (batálija)
- Bulgarian: би́тка (bg) f (bítka), сраже́ние (bg) n (sražénie), бой (bg) m (boj)
- Catalan: combat (ca) m
- Chinese:
Mandarin: 鬥爭 / 斗争 (zh) (dòuzhēng), 戰鬥 / 战斗 (zh) (zhàndòu) - Czech: bitva (cs) f, boj (cs) m
- Danish: kamp (da) c, slag (da) n
- Dutch: gevecht (nl) n, strijd (nl) m, slag (nl) m
- Egyptian: (ꜥḥꜣ)
- Estonian: lahing (et)
- Finnish: taistelu (fi)
- French: bataille (fr) f
- German: Kampf (de) m, Schlacht (de) f, Gefecht (de) n
- Greek: μάχη (el) f (máchi)
Ancient Greek: μάχη f (mákhē), δῆρις f (dêris) (Epic) - Hebrew: קְרָב (he) m (kráv)
- Hindi: युद्ध (hi) m (yuddh), लड़ाई (hi) f (laṛāī), झगड़ा (hi) m (jhagṛā)
- Hungarian: csata (hu), ütközet (hu)
- Icelandic: bardagi (is) m
- Italian: battaglia (it) f, combattimento (it) m
- Japanese: 戦闘 (ja) (せんとう, sentô), 戦い (ja) (たたかい, tatakai)
- Kashmiri: جَنٛگ (jang), یۄد (yọd)
- Korean: 전투(戰鬪) (ko) (jeontu), 전쟁(戰爭) (ko) (jeonjaeng), 싸움 (ko) (ssaum), 교전(交戰) (ko) (gyojeon)
- Kurdish:
Central Kurdish: شەڕ (ckb) (şerr) - Latin: pugna (la)
- Latvian: kauja (lv) f, cīņa f
- Lithuanian: kova (lt) f, mūšis m
- Macedonian: битка f (bitka), бој m (boj)
- Marathi: लढाई f (laḍhāī)
- Mongolian:
Cyrillic: тэмцэл (mn) (temcel), дайн (mn) (dajn), тулаан (mn) (tulaan)
Mongolian script: ᠲᠡᠮᠡᠴᠡᠯ (temečel), ᠳᠠᠶᠢᠨ (dayin), ᠲᠤᠯᠤᠭᠠᠨ (tuluɣan) - Norman: batâle f
- Norwegian:
Bokmål: slag (no) n - Old English: ġefeoht n
- Persian: پیکار (fa) (peykâr) (archaic), نبرد (fa) (nabard), مبارزه (fa) (mobâreze)
- Pijin: faet
- Polish: bój (pl) m, bitwa (pl) f, batalia (pl) f
- Portuguese: batalha (pt) f, luta (pt) f, combate (pt) m
- Romanian: bătălie (ro) f
- Romansh: cumbat m, cumbata f
- Russian: би́тва (ru) f (bítva), сраже́ние (ru) n (sražénije), бата́лия (ru) f (batálija)
- Sanskrit: युद्ध (sa) n (yuddha)
- Scottish Gaelic: cogadh m, sabaid f, blàr m
- Serbo-Croatian:
Cyrillic: би̏тка f, бо̀рба f, бо̑ј m
Latin: bȉtka (sh) f, bòrba (sh) f, bȏj (sh) m - Slovak: bitva (sk) f, bitka f, boj m
- Slovene: boj (sl) m, bitka (sl) f
- Spanish: pelea (es) f, combate (es) m, lucha (es) f, lid (es) f, liza (es) f
- Swahili: vita (sw)
- Swedish: slag (sv) n, strid (sv) c, kamp (sv) c
- Tajik: мубориза (tg) (muboriza)
- Tamil: சண்டை (ta) (caṇṭai)
- Tarifit: amenɣi m
- Tibetan: འཐབ་འཛིང ('thab 'dzing), དམག་འཁྲུག (dmag 'khrug), གཡུལ (g.yul)
- Tok Pisin: pait
- Turkish: savaş (tr)
Ottoman Turkish: صاواش (savaş), ناورد (naverd), پرخاش (perhaş) - Ukrainian: би́тва (uk) f (býtva), бій (uk) m (bij), бойови́ще (uk) n (bojovýšče), бойови́сько (uk) n (bojovýsʹko), бата́лія (uk) f (batálija)
physical confrontation
- Azerbaijani: dava (az)
- Bulgarian: бой (bg) m (boj)
- Catalan: baralla (ca) f, batussa (ca) f
- Czech: rvačka (cs) f
- Danish: slagsmål (da), ballade (da)
- Dutch: gevecht (nl) n, (colloquial, Flanders) boel (nl) m
- Finnish: tappelu (fi), taistelu (fi)
- French: bagarre (fr) f
- German: Keilerei (de) f, Prügelei (de) f
- Hebrew: ריב (he) m (rív), מַאֲבָק (he) m (ma'avák)
- Ingrian: tappelo
- Irish: troid f
- Italian: rissa (it) f
- Japanese: 喧嘩 (ja) (けんか, kenka)
- Kashmiri: لَڑٲے (laḍạ̄y)
- Latin: pugna (la), rixa f
- Latvian: kautiņš
- Lithuanian: muštynės pl, peštynės pl, grumtynės pl
- Mongolian: please add this translation if you can
- Norwegian:
Bokmål: slåsskamp (no) m - Persian: دعوا (fa) (da'vâ)
- Pijin: faet
- Polish: starcie (pl) n, bitwa (pl) f
- Portuguese: briga (pt) f
- Russian: дра́ка (ru) f (dráka), бой (ru) m (boj)
- Scottish Gaelic: cogadh m, sabaid f, còmhrag f
- Serbo-Croatian: tuča (sh) f
- Swahili: vita (sw)
- Tarifit: amenɣi m
- Tibetan: འཐབ་འཛིང ('thab 'dzing), འཐབ་འཁྲུག ('thab 'khrug)
- Tok Pisin: pait
- Turkish: dövüş (tr)
martial arts match
- Burmese: please add this translation if you can
- Chinese:
Mandarin: please add this translation if you can - Czech: zápas (cs)
- Danish: kamp (da)
- Dutch: gevecht (nl) n
- Esperanto: konkurso (eo)
- Finnish: kamppailu (fi), ottelu (fi)
- French: combat (fr) m
- Hebrew: קְרָב (he) m (kráv)
- Icelandic: bardagi (is) m, slagur m
- Italian: combattimento (it) m, incontro (it) m
- Japanese: 試合 (ja) (しあい, shiai)
- Kazakh: төбелес (töbeles)
- Khmer: please add this translation if you can
- Korean: please add this translation if you can
- Lao: please add this translation if you can
- Norwegian:
Bokmål: kamp (no) m - Persian: مسابقه (fa) (mosâbeqe), مبارزه (fa) (mobâreze)
- Polish: walka (pl) f
- Portuguese: luta (pt) f, combate (pt) m
- Romansh: lutga f
- Russian: бой (ru) m (boj)
- Spanish: combate (es) m
- Swedish: match (sv), fajt (sv)
- Thai: please add this translation if you can
- Vietnamese: trận (vi)
conflict of will, strife
- Armenian: պայքար (hy) (paykʻar)
- Belarusian: барацьба́ f (baracʹbá)
- Bulgarian: борба́ (bg) f (borbá)
- Danish: kamp (da)
- Dutch: strijd (nl) m
- Finnish: taistelu (fi)
- French: combativité (fr) f
- German: Streit (de) m
- Hebrew: מַאֲבָק (he) m (ma'avák)
- Hungarian: küzdelem (hu)
- Irish: comhrac m
- Norwegian:
Bokmål: kamp (no) m - Persian: نزاع (fa) (nezâ'), کشمکش (fa) (kešmakeš)
- Polish: walka (pl) f, bitwa (pl) f
- Portuguese: luta (pt) f
- Russian: борьба́ (ru) f (borʹbá)
- Scottish Gaelic: còmhrag f
- Serbo-Croatian:
Cyrillic: борба f
Latin: borba (sh) f - Spanish: lucha (es) f, socaliña (es) f (Honduras)
- Swahili: vita (sw)
- Swedish: kamp (sv)
- Ukrainian: боротьба́ (uk) f (borotʹbá)
will or ability to fight
- Azerbaijani: davakarlıq
- Czech: bojovnost (cs) f
- Dutch: vechtlust (nl) m
- Finnish: taistelutahto (fi)
- German: Kampfgeist (de) m
- Hebrew: רוח קרב f (rú`akh kráv)
- Japanese: ファイト (ja) (faito), 闘志 (ja) (とうし, tōshi), 戦意 (ja) (せんい, sen'i)
- Norwegian:
Bokmål: stridslyst m or f - Polish: bojowość (pl) f
- Portuguese: combatividade f
- Swahili: vita (sw)
Inherited from Old English feoht, ġefeoht, feohte, from Proto-West Germanic *feht, *fehtu, from Proto-Germanic *fehtą, *fehtō; compare fighten.
- fiȝt, ffyȝt, fyght, fyȝt, fyht
- feht, figt, ifiht (Early Middle English); fæht, feiht, feoht, veht (Laȝamon's Brut)
- viȝt, viyȝt (Kent); fiȝte, fiht, fyhte, vyhte (especially West Midland)
- feȝt, feghte, feyght, fith (Northern, North Midland); fecht, feicht, feycht, ficht, fycht (chiefly Early Scots)
- IPA(key): /fixt/
- IPA(key): /fɛxt/, /fæi̯xt/ (especially Northern North Midland)
fight (plural fightes)
- A fight; a combat engagement.
- Fighting; engagement in combat:
- (by extension) A conflict or contest:
- English: fight
- Middle Scots: fecht, feicht
- Scots: fecht
- “fight, n.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007.
- “fight, n.”, in OED Online
, Oxford: Oxford University Press, launched 2000. - “fecht, feicht, n.”, in The Dictionary of the Scots Language, Edinburgh: Scottish Language Dictionaries, 2004–present, →OCLC, reproduced from William A[lexander] Craigie, A[dam] J[ack] Aitken [_et al._], editors, A Dictionary of the Older Scottish Tongue: […], Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, 1931–2002, →OCLC.
fight
- (West Riding) alternative form of fighten
Borrowed from English fight. Attested since 1931.
fight c
- (colloquial) a fight (often in sports or of an argument)
- fightas
- “fight”, in Svensk ordbok [Dictionary of Swedish] (in Swedish)
- “fight”, in Svenska Akademiens ordlista [Wordlist of the Swedish Academy] (in Swedish)