-
1 conflictivo
• clashing• conflicting• conflictive• disconsonant• discrepant -
2 contendiente
• clashing• competitor• contender• contending• contestant• litigious• opobalsam• opponent• opportune• opposedly• opposing party• ritualistically• ritzy• rival• rival unionism -
3 de confrontación
• clashing• confrontational -
4 desacorde
• clashing• conflicting• different• discordant• inhaler• inharmoniousness -
5 discorde
• clashing• disagreeing• discordant• not advisable• not allocated expense -
6 discorde
adj.1 clashing (colores, opiniones).2 discordant, not agreeing, disagreeing, clashing.* * *► adjetivo1 (en desacuerdo) in disagreement2 (diferente) differing3 MÚSICA dissonant* * *ADJ1) (Mús) [sonido] discordant; [instrumento] out of tune2) [opiniones] clashing3)be in disagreement (de with)estar discorde — [personas] to disagree (de with)
* * *1) (Mús) discordant2) (frml) ( en desacuerdo) in disagreementse mostró discorde con la nueva disposición — he indicated that he disagreed with the new arrangement
* * *= out of tune.Ex. Soon they started receiving complaints that he left the pianos more out of tune than he found them.* * *1) (Mús) discordant2) (frml) ( en desacuerdo) in disagreementse mostró discorde con la nueva disposición — he indicated that he disagreed with the new arrangement
* * *= out of tune.Ex: Soon they started receiving complaints that he left the pianos more out of tune than he found them.
* * *A ( Mús) discordantB ( frml) (en desacuerdo) in disagreementse mostró discorde con la nueva disposición he indicated that he disagreed with the new arrangement* * *
Del verbo discordar: ( conjugate discordar)
discordé es:
1ª persona singular (yo) pretérito indicativo
Multiple Entries:
discordar
discorde
discorde adjetivo
1 (sin armonía) unharmonious: son estilos discordes, the styles do not go well together
2 (en desacuerdo) incongruous, at odds: sus opiniones son discordes, their opinions are at odds
* * *discorde adj1. [sonidos] discordant;[colores] clashing2. [opiniones, declaraciones, versiones] conflicting* * *adj1 clashing2 MÚS discordant -
7 disonante
adj.dissonant, discordant.f.dissonant.* * *► adjetivo1 MÚSICA dissonant, discordant2 figurado discordant* * *ADJ1) (Mús) dissonant2) (=discordante) discordant* * ** * *= jarring, dissonant, unharmonious, out of tune.Ex. The protagonist experiences a jarring descent from the heights of literary distinction at court to the coarseness of common experience.Ex. Public policies have created a framework for service that may be dissonant with the ideals of the transformational value of reading.Ex. The lighting is good but made unharmonious by the use of colour tints.Ex. Soon they started receiving complaints that he left the pianos more out of tune than he found them.----* de un modo disonante = jarringly.* * ** * *= jarring, dissonant, unharmonious, out of tune.Ex: The protagonist experiences a jarring descent from the heights of literary distinction at court to the coarseness of common experience.
Ex: Public policies have created a framework for service that may be dissonant with the ideals of the transformational value of reading.Ex: The lighting is good but made unharmonious by the use of colour tints.Ex: Soon they started receiving complaints that he left the pianos more out of tune than he found them.* de un modo disonante = jarringly.* * *1 ( Mús) dissonant2 ‹voz› discordant3 ‹colores› clashing* * *
disonante adjetivo (Mús) dissonant;
‹ voz› discordant;
‹ colores› clashing
disonante adjetivo harsh, dissonant: nunca dice una palabra disonante, he never says a harsh word
' disonante' also found in these entries:
English:
tuneless
- discord
* * *disonante adj1. [sonidos, ritmos, voces] dissonant, discordant2. [colores, estilos] clashing;ese sofá queda de lo más disonante that sofa simply screams it doesn't belong there -
8 desacorde
adj.1 differing, conflicting (opiniones).2 discordant, different, conflicting, clashing.* * *1 MÚSICA discordant* * *ADJ1) (Mús) discordant2) (=diverso) [opiniones] conflicting; [colores] clashing* * *adjetivo <opiniones/versiones> conflicting; < sonidos> discordant; < instrumentos> out of tune* * *= ill matched, out of tune.Ex. The library solved the problems of budget cuts, a library building bursting at the seams, and stock ill matched to some of the courses by switching to the use of on-line search services.Ex. Soon they started receiving complaints that he left the pianos more out of tune than he found them.* * *adjetivo <opiniones/versiones> conflicting; < sonidos> discordant; < instrumentos> out of tune* * *= ill matched, out of tune.Ex: The library solved the problems of budget cuts, a library building bursting at the seams, and stock ill matched to some of the courses by switching to the use of on-line search services.
Ex: Soon they started receiving complaints that he left the pianos more out of tune than he found them.* * *1 ‹opiniones/versiones› conflicting2 ‹sonidos› discordant; ‹instrumentos› out of tune* * *desacorde adj1. [opiniones] differing, conflicting2. [sonidos, notas musicales] discordant;[instrumentos] out of tune (with one another)* * *desacorde adj1) : conflicting2) : discordant -
9 discordante
adj.discordant (sonidos).* * *► adjetivo1 (en desacuerdo) discordant, conflicting2 (diferente) divergent, differing3 (estilo, color) clashing4 MÚSICA dissonant, discordant\dar la nota discordante / ser la nota discordante figurado to clash, hold a conflicting opinion■ a todos les pareció bien menos a él que siempre tenía que dar la nota discordante it seemed fine to everyone except him, who always had to be different* * *ADJ1) (Mús) discordant2) [opiniones] clashingsu traje fue la nota discordante en la reunión — his suit stuck out like a sore thumb in the meeting
* * *adjetivo (Mús) discordant; <opiniones/versiones> conflicting (before n)* * *= jarring, dissonant, raucous, unharmonious.Ex. The protagonist experiences a jarring descent from the heights of literary distinction at court to the coarseness of common experience.Ex. Public policies have created a framework for service that may be dissonant with the ideals of the transformational value of reading.Ex. This is an important point which has been poorly neglected in this lively and, at times, raucous debate.Ex. The lighting is good but made unharmonious by the use of colour tints.* * *adjetivo (Mús) discordant; <opiniones/versiones> conflicting (before n)* * *= jarring, dissonant, raucous, unharmonious.Ex: The protagonist experiences a jarring descent from the heights of literary distinction at court to the coarseness of common experience.
Ex: Public policies have created a framework for service that may be dissonant with the ideals of the transformational value of reading.Ex: This is an important point which has been poorly neglected in this lively and, at times, raucous debate.Ex: The lighting is good but made unharmonious by the use of colour tints.* * *1 ( Mús) discordant2 ‹opiniones/versiones› conflicting ( before n)* * *
discordante adjetivo (Mús) discordant;
‹opiniones/versiones› conflicting
discordante adjetivo discordant
nota discordante, opposing remark: Enrique, como siempre, puso la nota discordante, as always, Enrique voiced his disagreement
' discordante' also found in these entries:
English:
discordant
- harsh
- jangle
- jarring
* * *discordante adj1. [sonidos] discordant;[colores] clashing2. [opiniones, declaraciones, versiones] conflicting;él era la única voz discordante en la reunión he was the only one at the meeting to strike a discordant note* * *adj discordant* * *discordante adj1) : discordant2) : conflicting -
10 contendiente
adj.1 competing.los ejércitos contendientes the opposing armies2 contending, clashing, opposing, litigious.f. & m.contender.* * *► adjetivo1 contending, competing1 contender, contestant* * *noun mf.* * *1.ADJ contending2.SMF contestant, contender* * *masculino y femenino (para título, premio) contender; (en duelo, combate) adversary* * *= contender, contesting.Ex. For example, if the users of the library in a College of Education normally ask for slides sets by subject, and serials by title, then subject labels (such as classification numbers) and titles are, respectively, serious contenders for arrangement of the documents concerned.Ex. The duality of their role would make the contesting agents, the State and the professional library organisations, even greater enemies.* * *masculino y femenino (para título, premio) contender; (en duelo, combate) adversary* * *= contender, contesting.Ex: For example, if the users of the library in a College of Education normally ask for slides sets by subject, and serials by title, then subject labels (such as classification numbers) and titles are, respectively, serious contenders for arrangement of the documents concerned.
Ex: The duality of their role would make the contesting agents, the State and the professional library organisations, even greater enemies.* * *(para un título, premio) contender; (en un duelo, combate) adversary* * *
contendiente mf contender, contestant
' contendiente' also found in these entries:
English:
contender
- challenger
* * *♦ adj[en una competición] competing;las partes contendientes [en una guerra] the opposing sides;los ejércitos contendientes the opposing armies♦ nmf[en una competición] opponent; [en una pelea] opponent, adversary; [en una guerra] opponent, opposing side* * *m/f contender* * *contendiente nmf: contender -
11 desajuste
m.1 misalignment.2 inconsistency.3 misadjustent, upset, alteration, unbalance.4 skew.pres.subj.3rd person singular (él/ella/ello) Present Subjunctive of Spanish verb: desajustar.* * *1 (mal funcionamiento) maladjustment; (avería) breakdown2 figurado (planes etc) upsetting\desajuste de horarios clashing timetables pluraldesajuste económico economic imbalance* * *SM1) (=desarreglo) [de hormonas, presupuesto] imbalance; [de máquina] breakdownel desajuste entre los países ricos y pobres — the disparity o imbalance between rich and poor countries
2) (=desacuerdo) [gen] disagreement; [de planes] upsetting* * *1)a) (Econ, Fin) imbalanceb) (Psic, Sociol)2)a) ( trastorno) disruptionb) ( defecto) fault* * *= imbalance, mismatch, gap, misfit, malalignment, maladjustment, misadjustment, misalignment, unbalance.Ex. This results in an imbalance of error tolerance.Ex. The electron microscope is a clear case of extreme mismatch between the number of citations received and the impact of the instrument in a wide area of science.Ex. The gap between what private and public institutions charge means that private schools are at a big disadvantage in recruiting students.Ex. For the benefit of both users and vendors, this misfit should be overcome.Ex. The literature is filled with articles regarding the diagnosis, ' malalignment of the patella,' most of which give no precise diagnosis.Ex. The findings indicated that antisocial behavior was relatively stable across the elementary school years and seemed indicative for increasing maladjustment during adolescence.Ex. Laptop computers can also have misadjustments relating to color accuracy relative to a printer.Ex. These problems range from misalignment of priorities in information technology budgeting to extraordinary difficulties in human resources areas = Estos problemas van desde falta de coordinación en las prioridades del presupuesto para la tecnología de la información a dificultades extraordinarias en las cuestiones referentes a los recursos humanos.Ex. Unbalance occurs when the center of gravity of a rotating object is not aligned with its center of rotation.----* desajuste cada vez mayor entre... y = widening of the gap beween.... and, widening gap between... and.* desajuste cada vez menor entre... y = narrowing gap between... and, narrowing of the gap between... and.* desajuste terminológico = vocabulary mismatch.* * *1)a) (Econ, Fin) imbalanceb) (Psic, Sociol)2)a) ( trastorno) disruptionb) ( defecto) fault* * *= imbalance, mismatch, gap, misfit, malalignment, maladjustment, misadjustment, misalignment, unbalance.Ex: This results in an imbalance of error tolerance.
Ex: The electron microscope is a clear case of extreme mismatch between the number of citations received and the impact of the instrument in a wide area of science.Ex: The gap between what private and public institutions charge means that private schools are at a big disadvantage in recruiting students.Ex: For the benefit of both users and vendors, this misfit should be overcome.Ex: The literature is filled with articles regarding the diagnosis, ' malalignment of the patella,' most of which give no precise diagnosis.Ex: The findings indicated that antisocial behavior was relatively stable across the elementary school years and seemed indicative for increasing maladjustment during adolescence.Ex: Laptop computers can also have misadjustments relating to color accuracy relative to a printer.Ex: These problems range from misalignment of priorities in information technology budgeting to extraordinary difficulties in human resources areas = Estos problemas van desde falta de coordinación en las prioridades del presupuesto para la tecnología de la información a dificultades extraordinarias en las cuestiones referentes a los recursos humanos.Ex: Unbalance occurs when the center of gravity of a rotating object is not aligned with its center of rotation.* desajuste cada vez mayor entre... y = widening of the gap beween.... and, widening gap between... and.* desajuste cada vez menor entre... y = narrowing gap between... and, narrowing of the gap between... and.* desajuste terminológico = vocabulary mismatch.* * *Asíntomas de algún desajuste con el entorno symptoms of a failure to adjust to one's environment o of problems in adjusting to one's environmentB1 (trastorno) disruptionla tormenta provocó un desajuste en los horarios the storm disrupted the timetables2 (defecto) fault* * *
Del verbo desajustar: ( conjugate desajustar)
desajusté es:
1ª persona singular (yo) pretérito indicativo
desajuste es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente subjuntivo3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente subjuntivo3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) imperativo
Multiple Entries:
desajustar
desajuste
desajustar vtr (desbaratar planes, horarios) to upset
(una pieza) to loosen
desajuste sustantivo masculino upset
(económico) economic imbalance
un desajuste de horarios, a clash of timetables
' desajuste' also found in these entries:
English:
mismatch
* * *desajuste nm1. [de piezas] misalignment;[de aparato, motor, máquina] malfunction, fault2. [de declaraciones, versiones] inconsistency3. [económico] imbalance* * *m1 disruption2 COM imbalance3:existe un desajuste en el engranaje the gears are not adjusted correctly* * *desajuste nm1) : maladjustment2) : imbalance3) : upset, disruption -
12 encontrado
adj.1 found.2 opposing, contrary, divided, clashing.past part.past participle of spanish verb: encontrar.* * *1→ link=encontrar encontrar► adjetivo1 conflicting, contrary, opposing* * *ADJ [situación] conflicting; [posiciones] opposite* * *encontrados — conflicting, opposing
* * *= conflicting.Ex. As is the way with these things there were two conflicting criticisms levelled at the joint code.----* encontrado comúnmente = commonly-found.* intereses encontrados = competing interests.* * *encontrados — conflicting, opposing
* * *= conflicting.Ex: As is the way with these things there were two conflicting criticisms levelled at the joint code.
* encontrado comúnmente = commonly-found.* intereses encontrados = competing interests.* * *encontrado -dagen encontrados conflicting, opposingopiniones encontradas conflicting opinions* * *
Del verbo encontrar: ( conjugate encontrar)
encontrado es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
encontrado
encontrar
encontrar ( conjugate encontrar) verbo transitivo
1
no le encuentro lógica I can't see the logic in it
‹cáncer/quiste› to find, discover
2 (+ compl):
lo encuentro ridículo I find it ridiculous;
¿cómo encontraste el país? how did the country seem to you?
encontrarse verbo pronominal
1 ( por casualidad) encontradose con algn to meet sb, bump into sb (colloq)
2 ( recípr)
( por casualidad) to meet, bump into each other (colloq)
3 ( enf) ( inesperadamente) ‹billete/cartera› to find, come across;
4 (frml) ( estar) to be;
el hotel se encuentra cerca de la estación the hotel is (located) near the station
encontrado,-a adjetivo opposed: tienen intereses encontrados, they have conflicting interests
encontrar verbo transitivo
1 (algo/alguien buscado) to find: no encuentro el momento adecuado para decírselo, I can't find the right time to tell him
2 (tropezar) to meet: encontré a Luisa en el cine, I met Luisa at the cinema
encontrarás serias dificultades, you'll come up against serious difficulties
3 (considerar, parecer) lo encuentro de mal gusto, I find it in bad taste
' encontrado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
encontrada
- hallazgo
- hojear
- quien
English:
conflicting
- find
- footprint
- niche
- worth
- might
- somewhere
* * *encontrado, -a adj[intereses] conflicting; [opiniones] opposing;tener sentimientos encontrados to have mixed feelings* * *adj opposing* * *encontrado, -da adj: contrary, opposing -
13 roce
m.1 rubbing (contacto).el roce de la seda contra su piel the feel of the silk against her skinel roce de su mano en la mejilla the touch of his hand on her cheekel roce del viento en la piedra the weathering effect of the wind on the stoneme ha salido una ampolla del roce del zapato I've got a blister from my shoe rubbing against my foot2 graze (rasguño) (en piel).el pantalón tiene roces en las rodillas the trousers are worn at the kneesla pared está llena de roces the wall has had the paint scraped off it in several places3 close contact (trato).4 brush, quarrel (desavenencia).tener un roce con alguien to have a brush with somebody5 disagreement, friction, clashing, confrontation.6 rub, kiss, light touch.pres.subj.3rd person singular (él/ella/ello) Present Subjunctive of Spanish verb: rozar.* * *1 (fricción) rubbing; (en piel) chafing3 (contacto físico) light touch, brush5 familiar (disensión) friction, brush* * *noun m.1) brush, graze2) friction* * *SM1) (=acción) rub, rubbing; (Téc) friction; (Pol) friction2) (=herida) graze3) * (=contacto) close contacttener roce con algn — to be in close contact with sb, have a lot to do with sb
4) (=disgusto) brush* * *1) ( contacto) rubbing2) ( trato frecuente) regular contact3) (fricción, desacuerdo)4) (CS) ( don de gentes) social graces (pl)* * *= friction, run-in.Ex. It is becoming urgently necessary for all information agencies to develop the closest co-operation to avoid wasting their resources through needless duplication and friction.Ex. 'When you've been here a while, you'll see that it's hard to avoid run-ins with her,' Lehmann spoke up.----* roce con la muerte = close shave with death, close encounter with death.* * *1) ( contacto) rubbing2) ( trato frecuente) regular contact3) (fricción, desacuerdo)4) (CS) ( don de gentes) social graces (pl)* * *= friction, run-in.Ex: It is becoming urgently necessary for all information agencies to develop the closest co-operation to avoid wasting their resources through needless duplication and friction.
Ex: 'When you've been here a while, you'll see that it's hard to avoid run-ins with her,' Lehmann spoke up.* roce con la muerte = close shave with death, close encounter with death.* * *A1 (contacto) rubbingno soporta el roce de la sábana en las quemaduras he can't bear the sheet rubbing against o touching his burnsel roce del zapato le había producido ampollas the constant rubbing o chafing of the shoe had given her blisters, she had blisters where the shoe had rubbed o chafedel roce de las dos piezas genera calor friction between the two parts produces heatel roce de su mejilla the brush of her cheektiene los puños gastados por el roce his cuffs have worn2(marca, señal): le hicieron un roce al coche someone scratched o scraped her carel cuello de la camisa tiene roce the shirt collar is grimy with wearB(fricción, desacuerdo): no han tenido ni un roce they haven't had a single cross word, there's been no friction between themha habido graves roces dentro del partido there have been serious clashes o there has been a lot of friction within the partytuvo un roce con la policía she had a brush with the law* * *
Del verbo rozar: ( conjugate rozar)
rocé es:
1ª persona singular (yo) pretérito indicativo
roce es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente subjuntivo3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente subjuntivo3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) imperativo
Multiple Entries:
roce
rozar
roce sustantivo masculino
( fricción) friction;
el roce de su mejilla the brush of her cheek;
tiene los puños gastados por el roce his cuffs are worn
c) ( desacuerdo):
tener un roce con algn to have a brush with sb
rozar ( conjugate rozar) verbo transitivo ( tocar ligeramente):
sus labios roceon mi frente her lips brushed my forehead;
las sillas rozan la pared the chairs rub o scrape against the wall;
la bala le rozó el brazo the bullet grazed his arm;
me roza el zapato my shoe's rubbing
rozarse verbo pronominal
[manos/labios] to touch
◊ el bebé está rozado the baby has diaper (AmE) o (BrE) nappy rash
roce sustantivo masculino
1 (acción) rubbing, friction
estar algo desgastado por el roce, to be worn
2 (señal: en la piel) graze
(: en una superficie) rub, scuff mark
3 (entre personas: trato) regular contact
(: discusión) friction, brush
rozar
I verbo transitivo
1 (una cosa o persona a otra) to touch, brush: su mano rozó mi cara, his hand brushed my face
2 (produciendo daño) to graze
(un zapato) to rub
3 (una cualidad o defecto, una cifra) to border on, verge on: su último cuadro roza la genialidad, his last painting borders on genius
4 (por el uso) to wear out
II verbo intransitivo
1 (una cosa o persona a otra) to touch, brush
pasar rozando, to brush past
2 (produciendo daño) to rub: estos zapatos me rozan, these shoes are rubbing
3 (una cualidad o defecto, una cifra) to border on, verge on: su actitud rozaba en la mala educación, his attitude verged on rudeness
' roce' also found in these entries:
English:
brush
- rub off
- touch
* * *♦ nm1. [contacto] rubbing;el roce de la seda contra su piel the brushing of the silk against her skin;el roce de su mano en la mejilla the touch of his hand on her cheek;el roce de la silla con la pared ha desgastado la pintura the back of the chair has worn away some of the paint on the wall;me ha salido una ampolla del roce del zapato I've got a blister from my shoe rubbing against my foot;el roce del viento en la piedra the weathering effect of the wind on the stone2. [rozadura]la pared está llena de roces the wall has had the paint scraped off it in several places3. [rasguño] [en piel] graze;[en madera, zapato] scuffmark; [en metal] scratch4. [trato] close contact;con el roce se han ido tomando cariño being in close contact has made them grow fond of each other5. [desavenencia] brush, quarrel;tener un roce con alguien to have a brush with sb* * *m figfriction;tener roces con come into conflict with* * *roce nm1) : rubbing, chafing2) : brush, graze, touch3) : close contact, familiarity4) : friction, disagreement -
14 desentonado
adj.1 out of tune, inharmonical, discordant.2 off-key, off-tune, out of tune.past part.past participle of spanish verb: desentonar.* * *ADJ1) (Mús) out of tune2) [color] clashing* * *desentonado -daout of tunesoy muy desentonado ( AmL); I can't sing in tune -
15 chischás
-
16 desajuste de horarios
clashing timetables plural -
17 en oposición
• athwart• clashing• competing• contending• in open court• in opposition to -
18 reencontrado
• antagonistic• clashing• conflicting• opposedly• opposing party -
19 batidero
m.1 collision, the clashing of one thing against another.2 uneven ground, which renders the motion of carriages unpleasant.Guardar batideros (Met.) to guard against inconveniences3 washboard. (Nautical)4 banging. -
20 charro
(Sp. model spelled same [t∫áro ]'coarse, crude, rustic, or in bad taste'; probably from Basque txar 'bad, defective' or from a related Iberian term)1) Clark: 1890s. A Mexican horseman or cowboy, particularly one in the traditional costume consisting of a large sombrero decorated with gold or silver embroidery; a loose-fitting white shirt; a short, tight-fitting jacket; and tight-fitting, flared pants that are also decorated with embroidery, buttons, and braids. Carlisle notes that chario is an alternate spelling in the Southwest.2) The costume worn by the cowboy described in (1).3) Clark: 1930s. A coarse, mean person; a churl.4) More recently, a Mexican cowboy who competes in the Mexican rodeo circuit that is popular in southern California. According to the DRAE, charro originally referred to a resident of Salamanca, Spain, especially the region surrounding Alba, Vitigudino, Ciudad Rodrigo, and Ledesma, and to things of or pertaining to this region, such as the charro dress and manner of speaking. It is also an adjective used to describe a thing that is in poor taste or something decorated with bright, clashing colors. In Mexico, a charro is a horseman who dresses in a special costume as described above. Santamaría defines charro as an expert rider who is skilled in taming horses and other animals. Islas concurs, adding that charros are skilled in using rodeo-style rope-throws. He also notes that although the term charro and the clothing and customs pertaining to the charro originated in Salamanca, Spain, they have evolved considerably in the New World, and the charro has become a representative figure for the Mexican people. This term had reference to upper-class horsemen and hacendados (owners of the large Spanish land-grant haciendas) and contrasted with the term vaquero, which indicated much humbler origins.
См. также в других словарях:
clashing — index argument (contention), belligerency, competitive (antagonistic), contention (opposition), contradictory … Law dictionary
clashing — adjective sharply and harshly discordant clashing interests of loggers and conservationists clashing colors • Similar to: ↑incompatible … Useful english dictionary
Clashing — Clash Clash, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Clashed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Clashing}.] [Of imitative origin; cf. G. klatschen, Prov. G. kleschen, D. kletsen, Dan. klaske, E. clack.] 1. To make a noise by striking against something; to dash noisily together.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
clashing — adj. Clashing is used with these nouns: ↑cymbal … Collocations dictionary
clashing — Synonyms and related words: acrid, adversary, adversative, adverse, adversive, ajar, alien, antagonistic, anti, antipathetic, antithetic, antonymous, at cross purposes, at loggerheads, at odds, at variance, at war, balancing, belligerent, bitter … Moby Thesaurus
clashing — (Roget s IV) n. Syn. dissension, opposition, discord; see disagreement 1 … English dictionary for students
clashing — klæʃ n. sound of objects banging together; confrontation, conflict v. make a loud banging sound; bang together; strongly disagree, confront … English contemporary dictionary
clashing — n. 1. Clang, clank, clangor, clash, crash. 2. Opposition, interference, clash, jar, jarring, disagreement, contradiction, hostility, enmity … New dictionary of synonyms
clashing — adj 1. clanging, clangorous, clanking, clattering, rattling. 2. conflicting, opposing, disagreeing, discordant, dissenting, variant, differing; hostile, antagonistic, antipathetic. n 3. clang, clangor, clank, clatter; din, racket, tumult, uproar … A Note on the Style of the synonym finder
Clashing Rocks — Symplegades. * * * … Universalium
Clashing Rocks — Symplegades … Useful english dictionary