Feud in a sentence as a noun

George Romero beats this one over the head in his latest film, where is set in the midst of a blood feud.

The most hilarious part of Musk's ego-trip is that the longer he extends the feud, the worse he looks and the better Broder looks.

Recruit their relatives and start an old-fashioned Kentucky feud, complete with snipers and ambushes?

But it'd be nice if we could keep things in perspective here and at least do better than the media, who can't wait to pounce on a Princeton vs. Facebook feud.

Negroponte of MIT, with whom I have long had a good-natured feud, wants to position the design of digital media as "technology".

Feud in a sentence as a verb

A feud in PHP Internals followed not the first heated debate there... that mailing list is very useful as a textbook example of how not to run an open source community.

The "real" permanent solution to the "feud" is to align goals, legislate that brick and mortar restaurants AND food trucks get all their "stuff" from the same suppliers, including tires or whatever.

There are problem employees and management feud battles, but measured as a percentage of my time that I have to spend dealing with them, they are less of a problem in 35,000-person Google than in the 10-20 person startups I've worked in.

It seems pretty clear that they should be in UK English because that's what you were told to write them in... at your job...If this happened as described then I would have loved to be a coworker watching this hilariously petty feud unfold.

>Though for his part Shatner claims it was a one-sided feud he didn't even know about until 1993Which, of course, humorously confirms all of the casts' characterizations of him as a selfish egomaniac in a wig and a girdle.

Feud definitions

noun

a bitter quarrel between two parties

verb

carry out a feud; "The two professors have been feuding for years"