Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. The earliest known use of the noun stoush is in the 1870s. OED's earliest evidence for stoush is from 1877, in Tasmanian Tribune. It is also recorded as a verb from the 1860s.

  2. noun [ C ] Australian English informal uk / staʊʃ / us / staʊʃ /. Add to word list. a fight or disagreement: They keep getting into drunken stoushes with each other in pub car parks. The club will close on June 23 after a long stoush with residents. Fewer examples.

  3. 1. transitive. To beat or assault (a person); to punch; to… 2. intransitive. To quarrel or fight. Earlier version. stoush, v. in OED Second Edition (1989) slang (Australian and New Zealand). 1. 1862–. transitive. To beat or assault (a person); to punch; to strike. Also figurative: to defeat decisively. 1862.

  4. Jun 2, 2024 · stoush (plural stoushes) (Australia, New Zealand, informal) A fight, an argument. 1996, Elizabeth Knox, Glamour and the Sea, Victoria University Press, New Zealand, page 166, Barry explained that his friend wasn′t drunk, he′d been in a stoush, had a ding on his head and was covered in money.

  5. verb. adverb. pronoun. preposition. conjunction. determiner. exclamation. Stoush is a verb and can also act as a noun. A noun is a type of word the meaning of which determines reality. Nouns provide the names for all things: people, objects, sensations, feelings, etc.

  6. Noun stoush (pl. stoushes) (Australia, New Zealand, informal) A fight, an argument. 1996, Elizabeth Knox, Glamour and the Sea, Victoria University Press, New Zealand, page 166, Barry explained that his friend wasn′t drunk, he′d been in a stoush, had a ding on his head and was covered in money.

  7. People also ask

  8. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers. Word origin. C19: of uncertain origin. stoush in American English. (stauʃ) Austral informal. transitive verb. 1. stonker (sense 1), stonker (sense 2) noun. 2. a fight or brawl. Most material © 2005, 1997, 1991 by Penguin Random House LLC.