clash in the Oxford-Paravia Italian Dictionary

Translations for clash in the English»Italian Dictionary (Go to Italian»English)

I.clash [Brit klaʃ, Am klæʃ] N

II.also clash together VB trans (bang)

III.clash [Brit klaʃ, Am klæʃ] VB intr

Translations for clash in the Italian»English Dictionary (Go to English»Italian)

Your search term in other parts of the dictionary
clash
clash of opinions
to clash
to clash
to clash
clash
a personality clash
scontro SPORTS
clash
clash
clash
to clash

clash in the PONS Dictionary

Translations for clash in the English»Italian Dictionary (Go to Italian»English)

Translations for clash in the Italian»English Dictionary (Go to English»Italian)

clash Examples from the PONS Dictionary (editorially verified)

to clash over sth

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
Clash acknowledged that he had been in a relationship with the accuser; however, he characterized the relationship as being between consenting adults.
en.wikipedia.org
That provoked a clash between players from both clubs, forcing security personnel present and the managerial staff from both teams to intervene.
elitedaily.com
Much of the humor derives from their culture clash with the rest of the world.
en.wikipedia.org
They will point to the difficulty many immigrants have getting their credentials recognized, and the social disruption that can spring from culture clash.
www.theglobeandmail.com
A clash between two groups of civic body members have also reported from the municipal council hall in the forenoon.
www.thehindu.com
Their task was to harass the enemy phalanx before the clash, to try to provoke disorder and protect their own lines from enemy skirmishers.
en.wikipedia.org
However, it was later discovered that the cops had come prepared to pre-empt a clash between two groups.
www.thehindu.com
Although it works in ways, the culture clash and stress of secrecy prove tough going.
www.independent.ie
There was also a culture clash.
en.wikipedia.org
An accidental clash of heads opened up a cut in the eyelid of the Rumanian in the opener.
blogs.telegraph.co.uk

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