I. verb
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a bitter fight/struggle
▪
The law was passed after a bitter fight that lasted nearly a decade.
a desperate struggle/battle/fight
▪
The climbers faced a desperate struggle to reach safety.
a fighting chance (= a small but real chance )
▪
The Republican Party has a fighting chance at the next election.
be fighting for your life (= be so ill or injured that you might die )
▪
One badly burned man was fighting for his life in hospital.
beat off/fight off competition
▪
She beat off competition from dozens of other candidates to get the job.
cock fight
combat/fight unemployment
▪
The government's first priority is to combat unemployment.
extreme fighting
fight a battle ( also wage a battle formal )
▪
The police are fighting a tough battle against crime.
▪
Many areas around here are waging a constant battle against vandalism.
fight a blaze
▪
Nearly 80 firefighters fought the blaze for three hours on Sunday.
fight (a) disease (= try to stop it continuing )
▪
Some bacteria help the human body fight disease.
fight a fire (= try to make a fire stop burning )
▪
Further attempts to fight the fire were abandoned.
fight a war
▪
The two countries fought a brief war in 1995.
fight an election British English ( also contest an election British English formal ) (= take part in it and try to win )
▪
Three independent candidates are also planning to contest the election.
fight for a cause (= take action to achieve an aim )
▪
Young people often want to fight for a cause.
fight for compensation (= try hard to get it )
▪
Alan, who hurt his back and hasn't worked since, is still fighting for compensation.
fight for equality
▪
Women fought for equality throughout the twentieth century.
fight in a war (= take part as a soldier )
▪
Her grandfather fought in the war.
fight the flab (= lose weight )
▪
simple advice to help you fight the flab
fight/choke/blink back tears (= try not to cry )
▪
She fought back tears yesterday as she re-lived the horrors she had seen.
fight/combat an infection
▪
A new drug is being developed to combat the infection.
fight/combat evil
▪
Joan swore to fight evil in all its forms.
fight/combat inflation
▪
An economic plan to combat inflation was drawn up.
fight/combat poverty (= take action to get rid of poverty )
▪
The money should be spent on fighting poverty.
fight/combat terrorism
▪
We will provide the necessary resources to combat terrorism.
fight/combat/tackle crime
▪
There are a number of ways in which the public can help the police to fight crime.
fight/gasp for air (= try to breathe with difficulty )
▪
He clutched his throat as he fought for air.
fighting fit British English (= very fit )
▪
I had just come back from holiday and was fighting fit.
fight/struggle for survival
▪
Many construction companies are fighting for survival.
fight/tackle corruption (= try to stop it )
▪
He criticized the government for failing to fight corruption in high places.
fire fight
fire fighting
fist fight
gasp/fight for breath (= have difficulty breathing )
▪
He was lying on the floor gasping for breath.
had...snowball fight
▪
We had a massive snowball fight .
hand-to-hand fighting/combat etc
▪
There was fierce hand-to-hand fighting in the streets of the city.
▪
They were defeated in hand-to-hand combat.
Heavy fighting
▪
Heavy fighting was reported near the border.
prepare yourself for a race/fight etc
▪
The Chicago Bears are busy preparing themselves for the big game.
resist/fight/suppress an urge
▪
She had to resist a constant urge to look back over her shoulder.
sb’s fight/struggle/battle for survival
▪
Their lives had been one long struggle for survival.
start a fight/argument
▪
Oh, don’t go trying to start an argument.
the fight/war against terrorism
▪
ideas on how the international community can further the war against terrorism
the struggle/fight for equality
▪
the people who led the struggle for equality in the United States
the struggle/fight for freedom
▪
The student movement played an important role in the struggle for political freedom.
ultimate fighting
violence/fighting spreads
▪
There is no indication that the violence is likely to spread.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
back
▪
Playing an unusual opening variation, Yusupov secured some advantage, but with accurate play Karpov fought back .
▪
To fight back , PacBell has challenged the fairness of the bid process.
▪
They fought back as the enemy continued to bomb hangars and parked aircraft.
▪
But the business is fighting back , revamping betting shops, simplifying the pools coupons and advertising better odds.
▪
The parasites can fight back , with a range of eggs that mimic those of their chosen host.
▪
So you fight back the anxiety.
▪
Another 10 years down the track, though, and the magpies started to fight back .
▪
While she lay waiting, Elinor fought back the fears underscored by the hospital bed and the smell of antiseptic.
hard
▪
Belfast was one which fought hard and played great football.
▪
For years we fought hard against the police attitude not to treat this as a crime.
▪
I hoped to keep one of them alive for questioning, but they fought hard .
▪
The president fought hard for the plan, and saw it through Congress by mid-March.
▪
Cnut's men had fought hard , and doubtless expected to be remunerated accordingly.
▪
I fought hard for the right to be right.
▪
She fought hard to get him a part-time playgroup place in the group his older brother attended.
▪
She was fighting hard not to be unpleasant.
off
▪
There crawled into my mind one nasty little question that I'd been fighting off till now.
▪
But Nicole fought off his advances.
▪
Claridges and the Savoy had to fight off take-over bids with borrowed money.
▪
The athlete then fights off enemies with sword and pistol.
▪
Terry managed to fight off the man; if he hadn't, he reckons he wouldn't be alive today.
▪
We gasped for breath and fought off the pain, desperate not to lose.
▪
But others have been forced to take on heavy debts to fight off hostile bids.
▪
You also lose your ability to fight off diseases of various kinds.
on
▪
However, if the tooth is knocked out completely, little additional damage can be done by fighting on .
▪
We fought on through most of the night, and when first dawn broke, we were still fully engaged.
▪
This is a good quality in that we will fight on despite terrible injuries, Sir.
▪
Some lawmakers want to repeal that measure and order the Fed to focus solely on fighting inflation.
▪
She was also mistaken in declaring her intention to fight on immediately the result of the first ballot was known.
▪
On the evening of 20 November the Prime Minister's swift decision to fight on plunged the Conservatives into almost total disarray.
▪
Nor is it clear how many ministers urged her to fight on - though at least two did.
■ NOUN
battle
▪
Muriel was disinclined to know what battle had been fought , on what ground, and how badly Lily had been hurt.
▪
Just another hill where they fought another battle .
▪
There were always new battles to fight , new obstacles to uproot, new heresies to stamp out.
▪
A major battle must be fought to get rid of it.
▪
On the forward slopes of this mountain, towards Monfalcone, terrible and bloody battles had been fought .
▪
With fewer material battles to fight , character, values and faith seem to have filled the vacuum.
▪
It recalls the unsuccessful battles fought in the early 1970s to prevent the limestone-quarrying operation that made the scar.
breath
▪
I will fight to my last breath .
▪
I wad tired of fighting for breath .
▪
The illness causes the sufferer to fight for every breath when they're having an attack.
▪
His face was set in a painful rictus, his chest heaving as he fought for breath .
▪
Half way up she paused, fighting for breath , suddenly struck by the enormity of what she was doing.
▪
Agnes leaned against the castle wall, which was streaming with water, and fought for breath .
▪
None of the usual muck one finds in the lungs when a man's fighting for his breath .
▪
Theda held her while she fought for breath , taking in great gasps of air.
campaign
▪
Mr Major, they said, had fought an appalling campaign and Mr Kinnock a superb one.
▪
He fought the 1987 election campaign .
▪
Labour in 1983 under Michael Foot fought a disastrous campaign .
▪
Nellist has fought an aggressive campaign on his Parliamentary record and flooded the area with leaflets - 20,000 distributed yesterday alone.
▪
Mr Kinnock fought a good campaign .
▪
Her father, Ron Smith fought a long campaign for the investigation to be heard in this country.
▪
Residents have fought a long campaign to stop some motorists using the roads as a race track.
▪
Rather they fight guerrilla campaigns , as befits their savagery, which are extremely difficult to subdue.
corner
▪
He had nobody back in Langley who would be willing to fight his corner .
▪
Jen fought her corner fiercely but Helen knew that she was winning.
▪
But each is fighting its national corner too.
▪
She always said he should have stayed to fight his corner .
▪
Sara Keays has continued to fight her corner .
death
▪
While not explicit, many implied that they would indeed fight to the death for their managing director.
▪
They say we massacred him, but he would have massacred us had we not defended ourselves and fought to the death .
▪
But death can only be fought with death, and life with life, he wrote.
▪
No, she fights her to the death , which from the point of view of the species is unhelpful.
▪
If the adventurers pursue the Harpies back to their lair, they will fight to the death to defend it.
▪
I fling them from my bed and in that moment resolve to fight back, vowing death to another species.
▪
He fights almost to the death rather than succumb.
▪
High Road has tackled all kinds of issues from pit bull terrier fighting to cot death in order to illuminate character.
election
▪
He fought the 1987 election campaign.
▪
The Conservative and Unionist party will fight the next general election as the party of the Union.
▪
Is not that a terrible record on which to fight a general election , in which the Government will be defeated?
▪
Twenty parties are registered to fight the election and some of the smaller ones are making a respectable showing.
▪
There was a time when the provisionals sought to ride both horses simultaneously, fighting elections and plotting murder.
▪
He unsuccessfully fought the next three elections .
▪
It seems important, therefore, to try to establish how the decision to fight the election came about.
fire
▪
Every member of the warehouse staff should be trained in the use of various portable fire fighting appliances installed within the premises.
▪
Then they would close up, go forward, receive the withering infantry fire , and fight as best they could.
▪
They make sure fire instructions are clearly displayed and that fire fighting equipment is in its correct place.
▪
The Lone fire is being fought with a lot more than just water.
▪
Height and restricted access are the most significant factors of the fire fighting problem.
▪
They are the victims of auto accidents, industrial accidents, falls from cliffs, fires , fights , stabbings, shootings.
▪
How could it be otherwise? Fire must fight fire, must it not?
▪
Well briefed guards with fire fighting appliances should be placed in the vicinity.
life
▪
As a result of this, the Bristol Centre is fighting for its life .
▪
She was fighting for her life with her entire body, kicking and biting and cursing.
▪
Medical campaigners say they're fighting for quality of life .
▪
I realized I was fighting for my life and defended myself.
▪
Mr Major and his Chancellor Norman Lamont were fighting for their political lives last night in the greatest crisis they have faced.
▪
Dole is a man who has fought his entire life to protect and advance his core beliefs.
▪
One day we may meet that villain, or the many like him, and have to fight for our very lives .
▪
But less than 6 months ago, she was fighting for her life .
man
▪
Many of the men who had actually fought got nothing.
▪
The Gulf War was a disaster for men and women fighting together on the same battlefield, he maintained.
▪
This man may have fought at Flodden but he is not King James.
▪
The dyed hair and dyed moustache are no longer Signs of a man wishing to fight the odds.
▪
The classic example of this is the girl who sets two men fighting for her.
▪
He was one against four - and already wounded - and yet he stood there deliberately inciting the men to fight .
▪
I prefer to believe that men who fought for the United States understand what they fought for and what others died for.
survival
▪
Now they are fighting for survival .
▪
Two years ago, he arrived battered, beaten and fighting for survival in the face of Republican victories in 1994.
▪
For two years Vlasov was limited to the depressing task of fighting for the very survival of his movement.
▪
This argument is that the inverse relationship is a result of desperate families fighting for survival from too small pieces of land.
▪
Mr Milosevic is fighting for his political survival after a vicious campaign tainted by intimidation and haunted by fears of electoral fraud.
▪
Time allowed 00:22 Read in studio Five puppies are fighting for survival after being left to die in a rubbish sack.
▪
Not even the farmers-right now fighting for their very survival-have escaped the scourge of the climate change levy.
▪
On the contrary, they saw their San Francisco elderly as fighting for survival and self-esteem through a remarkable variety of strategies.
tear
▪
It was still tender from the soldier's abuse, but the pain helped her fight back incipient tears .
▪
I find myself fighting back tears as I thank them for coming.
▪
Desperately she fought back the tears , not knowing why they had formed so swiftly.
▪
Shareef Abdur-Rahim fought back tears throughout his statement and parts of the question-and-answer period that followed.
▪
Breathing deeply, fighting sudden fresh tears , she stared at the whitewashed walls of the tiny, tidy yard.
▪
In fact, the chance to show Neely fighting back tears probably became an excuse to return to the topic.
▪
None of it registered, because she was fighting tears that were perilously near.
war
▪
For me the mystery of the enemy's identity had been increased by the peculiar sort of war I had fought .
▪
The Art Deco war fought with tanks and Rolls-Royces is another plus.
▪
Those camps weren't military targets, they didn't affect the way the war was being fought .
▪
The best way to fight against the threat of nuclear war is to fight for socialism through class-struggle means.
▪
The war for independence was fought on several fronts.
▪
His brother Menelaus was the husband of Helen, for whose sake the Trojan War was fought .
▪
At that point there will be a different air war to fight , for which crews must be kept fresh.
▪
The Civil War had been fought in the main in the borderlands, precisely where the national question was at its most urgent.
way
▪
Von Schönberg had had no need to fight his way up the ranks.
▪
Bar girls were screaming, and trying to fight their way past us.
▪
Then he had to fight his way out of her pages.
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At the very least, they could organize to fight the oppressive way in which science gets done.
▪
We will swim through seas of blood, fight our way through lakes of fire, if we are ordered.
▪
Bowman glanced back only once at Whitehead, as he fought his way out of the cubicle.
▪
After fighting his way through all this, he would have to face an angry and almost certainly stark-naked Quigley.
▪
Meanwhile, the master had sprung from his position backstage and was fighting his way toward me.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a fight to the finish
▪
It will be a fight to the finish .
▪
Six teams are bitter rivals in what will be a fight to the finish .
fight a rearguard action
▪
A rearguard action is being fought against the sale of the land for business development.
▪
With their captain and inspiration, Roy Aitken, suspended, Saints seemed to have come prepared to fight a rearguard action.
fight tooth and nail
▪
We had to fight tooth and nail to get the government to admit they were wrong.
▪
He fought tooth and nail for 15 months before going to sleep one final night last week.
▪
He would also fight tooth and nail to keep her from the likes of Tommy Allen.
▪
Legislation aimed at forcing the power firms to clean up their act is being fought tooth and nail by the polluters.
▪
They fought tooth and nail through an initial series of leagues and finished in seven knockout matches.
▪
They fought tooth and nail to protect the solicitors' monopoly of conveyancing but eventually compromised by not objecting to licensed conveyancers.
fight your corner/fight sb's corner
fight your own battles
▪
She has a talent for playing modern women who must find the inner strength to fight their own battles .
▪
Surely it is better for the townsfolk themselves to develop the necessary skills to fight their own battles ?
▪
We invaded Ireland and fought our own battles there.
grudge fight/match
▪
None of the combatants in this grunge grudge match are over 20.
▪
Six other players were sin-binned as Britain beat New Zealand 3-2 in a grudge match.
have no stomach for a fight/task etc
▪
They proved to have no stomach for a fight with only Steve Regeling showing any semblance of spirit.
pillow fight
▪
Is it like a pillow fight with rock-hard chestnuts?
run/hurt/fight etc like hell
▪
I know he lost his legs first, and then his fingers-he died alone and it hurt like hell .
▪
I remember running like hell , knowing I was being pursued and looking back for Sarah, who didn't join me.
▪
I was able to breathe only with the utmost difficulty, and my arm hurt like hell .
▪
Must have fought like hell to find its niche within the forest, to distinguish itself within the pack.
▪
My forehead hurt like hell and my body was bruised all over, but no bones were broken.
▪
Run, North, run; just run like hell .
▪
Spring sauntered north, but he had to run like hell to keep it as his traveling companion.
▪
We fought like hell for most of the time.
three-cornered contest/fight
▪
Third, after a terrific three-cornered fight, were David Hoskins and David James.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪
Amnesty is an organization that fights against torture and injustice.
▪
As kids, we fought about everything, but now we're pretty good friends.
▪
Billy had been fighting with some kids from another school.
▪
Civil rights groups have vowed to fight the changes.
▪
Freedom of speech is something well worth fighting for.
▪
He said he'd fight anyone who tried to stop him entering.
▪
His grandfather fought on the Republican side in the Spanish Civil War.
▪
If you two don't stop fighting about what to watch I'm going to send you to your room.
▪
If you want the job, you'll have to fight for it.
▪
Kerry's parents are always fighting -- I'm not surprised she left home.
▪
Mandela fought to abolish white-only rule in South Africa.
▪
McCallum and Toney fought to a draw.
▪
Most of these young soldiers don't even know what they're fighting for.
▪
My grandfather fought in World War II.
▪
My mother and my grandmother fight all the time.
▪
Neil Phillips will now fight Adams for leadership of the party.
▪
Pancho Villa fought a battle near here.
▪
The Boers were fighting the British at this time.
▪
The children fought and pushed in line.
▪
The Prime Minister has decided to stay on to fight another election.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪
Adult gangs did fight , but not with innocent people or bystanders.
▪
As no man can serve two masters we had long been told no wise general tries to fight on two fronts.
▪
Burke, for one, is committed to fighting this social dis-ease.
▪
Conversely, if middle-class parents stay, if they stay and fight , they can turn things around.
▪
For a few minutes we fought wildly.
▪
He has even fought skeleton warriors with Jason and the Argonauts.
▪
I argued, I fought, but he wanted to believe that happiness was impossible; it gave him some strange consolation.
▪
Our fathers, our grandfathers fought for that.
II. noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
big
▪
Then there was a big fight and she said I mustn't use them ever again.
▪
The Conservatives are putting up a big fight .
▪
The next morning they had their first big fight .
▪
Sometimes, however, notably during a General Election or a big fight , total inaccuracy is publicly punished.
▪
We had a big fight about a box of crackers.
▪
And with big fight tickets to sell, Frank isn't going to stand about silently while Lennox knocks his fight.
▪
Putting up the biggest fight is Gen.
bitter
▪
Passage of the 1994 law came after a bitter fight that lasted nearly a decade.
▪
The United States will continue to furnish you and your people with the fullest measure of support in this bitter fight .
good
▪
They likes a good fight in Bristol.
▪
I really like having a good fight with my wife, mornings when I have to go to work.
▪
I won't leave my kids without a bloody good fight .
▪
But our daughters and our sons may not see the fight we fought as the good fight.
▪
But assuming for the moment that we can do better than fight over the trough, how do we do it?
▪
These days he still carries on the good fight , primarily through his poignant, unadorned music.
▪
With the can and the bottle he fought the good fight, and kept himself from himself again.
▪
We had one good fight about Denver.
hard
▪
It was a long hard fight , but by now it was dark and this helped us very much.
▪
There was a long, hard fight , but when it finished, we and the ship were prisoners.
▪
You have learnt a lesson, fought a hard fight and are now ready to receive a valuable reward.
▪
It's undoubtedly the hardest fight Frank has had since his comeback.
▪
But the Tories are putting up a hard fight .
long
▪
That was the other thing, it took me a long fight to get my eye drops.
▪
Why do the hockey players skate around for so long between fights ?
▪
It was a long hard fight , but by now it was dark and this helped us very much.
▪
Mancini, who died in 1994 after a long fight with cancer, is undergoing something of a rebirth.
▪
Naked heel's a long fight .
▪
After a long fight , the mystery monster turned out to be a 57-inch sturgeon that weighed 46 pounds.
▪
There was a long , hard fight , but when it finished, we and the ship were prisoners.
▪
After a long fight to beat inflation, the government does not feel sympathetic to these demands.
real
▪
Armed only with flesh-rending knives and magic Shurikens, the droids have a real fight on their hands.
▪
But the real fight was brewing in Washington.
▪
For the first time, Shirnette and me had a real fight , because of what I hated most.
▪
Each time Ted hit, he stepped back with his fists knotted, waiting for a real fight .
▪
The playgoers of London knew a real fight when they saw one.
▪
They can now afford to have a real bloody fight on that.
▪
The kid comes out hard, apparently wanting to make it a real fight .
▪
It wasn't a real fight and the blood wasn't real.
tough
▪
But it's being treated that way and a tough fight is promised.
▪
Harry Reid, face a tough fight on the Senate floor.
▪
Now he is facing his toughest fight yet - back to fitness after suffering a fractured fibula and damaged ankle ligaments.
▪
If champions are gauged by their ability to win tough fights , Marco Antonio Barrera has quite a future.
▪
Anyway, Unix now faces a much tougher fight for survival against Microsoft Corp - or are we imagining things?
▪
It was a very tough fight .
▪
Both the defenders and opponents of the Constitution girded for a tough fight .
■ NOUN
fist
▪
The rally broke up in fist fights and violence, and the whole thing spread on to the streets.
▪
Can you imagine knowing, and liking, a man who engages in fist fights ?
▪
They can not get away from the characters as they have fist fights or shoot up.
▪
A fist fight followed, with much shouting and squabbling, until the ragged man succeeded in driving up to the door.
▪
While there, for whatever reason, he engaged himself in a fist fight with a man asking for money.
▪
One third said they had gotten into fist fights .
▪
Challenge them to a good old-fashioned fist fight ?
▪
There was generally a fist fight in Hard Class after lunch, and Vassily provoked quarrels at every meal.
street
▪
John Candotti had once waded into a street fight simply because he thought the odds were too lopsided.
▪
Mob assaults upon blacks and street fights continued.
▪
Read in studio A murder suspect has told a court that he accidentally stabbed a teenager to death during a street fight .
▪
Two hundred and fifty stitches for street fight victim Prostite murder.
▪
Even before the last Albert Hall rally, Joyce and Mosley had joined the street fight .
title
▪
Why, they asked, should these associations collect such large fees for sanctioning a title fight ?
▪
Sugar Ray Leonard won his world middle-weight title fight with Roberto Duran.
▪
The parade of the athletes to these press conferences was like the opening of a Marvin Hagler title fight .
▪
When he collapsed with brain damage during the world super-middleweight title fight he could so easily have died.
■ VERB
join
▪
Armoured figures drew their swords and shouted incoherently, joining the fight to the rear.
▪
I suppose they expected me to stop and join the fight .
▪
Police have renewed their appeal to the public to join the fight against horse attacks by reporting anything suspicious.
▪
I have to join the fight .
▪
The thought came to him in an instant as he stood, hesitating over whether to join the fight .
▪
Between ten and twenty other youths, said to be between eighteen and twenty years old, joined the fight .
▪
Read in studio Staff at one of the country's oldest breweries have joined the fight to keep it independent.
▪
His followers closed in, looking for an opening to join the fight and pin Bigwig down.
lose
▪
Read in studio A man severely brain damaged in an operation more than twenty-five years ago, has lost his fight for compensation.
▪
By and large, it was a losing and demoralizing fight .
▪
Gusinsky could lose everything in a fight with Putin.
▪
He usually lost his fights , but after he understood his nose, he never again bled to the vomit point.
▪
They lost their fight to prevent the war, but never their desire for peace.
▪
He may be losing in the fight for delegates.
▪
And there ... There, James ... There, my son, I lost the fight .
▪
At home and abroad, Mr Gorbachev has an awful lot to lose from a fight .
pick
▪
We adults do the same: we come home from work and start complaining or picking a fight .
▪
Had never picked a fight in his life.
▪
Barton Lynch's manager had once picked a fight with him.
▪
From a lack of communication, parents are more likely to misunderstand, blame, or pick fights with one another.
▪
Anthony Ryan was known in his family as able to pick a fight with his own fingernails.
▪
The first thing Vicious does is start picking fights with these guys who are supposed to protect him.
▪
You pick your side and fight for it.
▪
He loved to pick arguments and fights .
spoil
▪
It seemed to him that Vincent came home spoiling for a fight .
▪
She is an egocentric, angry, combative woman spoiling for a fight .
▪
Be that as it may, Cooper was spoiling for a fight , as this unpublished letter shows.
start
▪
They are more likely to start fights with other children, kill and be cruel to animals and have behaviour problems.
▪
I started learning on my own, and we started getting into fights about things.
▪
He'd never started a fight in his life.
▪
One Saturday a couple of young punks decided to start a fight with my father.
▪
No one in his right mind would want to start a fight in such a place as this.
▪
Somebody else might have started a fight or caused a commotion.
▪
They would pretend to get pissed and start a fight .
▪
He can even start a fight to draw us into a trap.
win
▪
The deal, which is worth almost seventeen million pounds, depends on Morland winning its fight for survival.
▪
If champions are gauged by their ability to win tough fights , Marco Antonio Barrera has quite a future.
▪
Badger victory Wildlife campaigners are celebrating after winning an 18 year fight to protect badgers from badger baiting.
▪
Emile won maybe 20 title fights after that.
▪
So who wins the fight for the remote?
▪
Regardless, he did not win that fight .
▪
Successive personnel managers had always caved in to his demands as they knew full well that Clasper would win a stand-up fight .
▪
They won the field position fight by a huge margin.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a fight to the finish
▪
It will be a fight to the finish .
▪
Six teams are bitter rivals in what will be a fight to the finish .
be spoiling for a fight/argument
▪
Be that as it may, Cooper was spoiling for a fight, as this unpublished letter shows.
fight tooth and nail
▪
We had to fight tooth and nail to get the government to admit they were wrong.
▪
He fought tooth and nail for 15 months before going to sleep one final night last week.
▪
He would also fight tooth and nail to keep her from the likes of Tommy Allen.
▪
Legislation aimed at forcing the power firms to clean up their act is being fought tooth and nail by the polluters.
▪
They fought tooth and nail through an initial series of leagues and finished in seven knockout matches.
▪
They fought tooth and nail to protect the solicitors' monopoly of conveyancing but eventually compromised by not objecting to licensed conveyancers.
fight your corner/fight sb's corner
fight your own battles
▪
She has a talent for playing modern women who must find the inner strength to fight their own battles .
▪
Surely it is better for the townsfolk themselves to develop the necessary skills to fight their own battles ?
▪
We invaded Ireland and fought our own battles there.
grudge fight/match
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None of the combatants in this grunge grudge match are over 20.
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Six other players were sin-binned as Britain beat New Zealand 3-2 in a grudge match.
have no stomach for a fight/task etc
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They proved to have no stomach for a fight with only Steve Regeling showing any semblance of spirit.
live to see/fight another day
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A conciliatory gesture, some argued, would appease the cardinal and Holy Trinity would live to fight another day.
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By his diplomacy, it was true, Gordon had lived to fight another day.
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Having lived to fight another day, Mayer did - with Sam Goldwyn.
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Or will they live to fight another day?
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Pol pot lives to fight another day despite butchering millions of his people.
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The choice for us was whether to take a strike unprepared or to live to fight another day.
pick a quarrel/fight (with sb)
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Anthony Ryan was known in his family as able to pick a fight with his own fingernails.
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Barton Lynch's manager had once picked a fight with him.
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But it is hard to pick a quarrel with pasta.
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From a lack of communication, parents are more likely to misunderstand, blame, or pick fights with one another.
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Had never picked a fight in his life.
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His favorite thing is to pick fights with me and then leave brown lunch bags on our doorstep.
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The first thing Vicious does is start picking fights with these guys who are supposed to protect him.
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We adults do the same: we come home from work and start complaining or picking a fight.
pillow fight
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Is it like a pillow fight with rock-hard chestnuts?
put up a fight/struggle/resistance
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By then I realized it was all too late anyway so I didn't put up a fight.
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Had he, perhaps, put up a fight?
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I bet you did that last night. - Did she put up a fight, then?
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I start running, but my body puts up a fight.
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Instead of dragging everything into the open and putting up a fight, I held on in silence.
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Not only relieved by beating Dallas, but yes, this team can put up a fight.
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The temptation was great to muster what force we could and put up a fight.
run/hurt/fight etc like hell
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I know he lost his legs first, and then his fingers-he died alone and it hurt like hell .
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I remember running like hell , knowing I was being pursued and looking back for Sarah, who didn't join me.
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I was able to breathe only with the utmost difficulty, and my arm hurt like hell .
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Must have fought like hell to find its niche within the forest, to distinguish itself within the pack.
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My forehead hurt like hell and my body was bruised all over, but no bones were broken.
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Run, North, run; just run like hell .
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Spring sauntered north, but he had to run like hell to keep it as his traveling companion.
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We fought like hell for most of the time.
three-cornered contest/fight
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Third, after a terrific three-cornered fight, were David Hoskins and David James.
throw a match/game/fight
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This year, he is throwing a game party at his home in Austin.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
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A couple of fights broke out near the stadium after the game.
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A good fight once in a while can clear the air.
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Are you going to watch the big fight tomorrow?
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He had been at the pub for several hours before getting into a fight with another man.
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He knocked out his opponent only five minutes into the fight .
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He was a hero in the fight for independence from France.
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How did you get that black eye? Were you in a fight ?
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New laws have been passed to help the police in their fight against organized crime.
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The fight against malnutrition and preventable diseases must continue.
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the fight between Joe Louis and Rocky Marciano
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There was a massive fight after school yesterday.
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Three of his ribs were broken in a fight .
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Tyson's fight against Evander Holyfield
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Women's fight for equality has not ended.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
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But Eliades is demanding that pot, plus Lewis' fight fee of around £5m, is frozen by a court judge.
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I went through with the fight , like I had said, knocked him out.
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If we had a fight I know I'd win, easy-peasy.
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It is considered one of the most significant developments in the fight against many brain disorders and diseases.
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Northener Warren Goss takes up: Night came, yet the fight went on....
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So anyway, so how did somebody almost get into a fight besides him and Jessica?
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That was the other thing, it took me a long fight to get my eye drops.