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  1. Dictionary
    wrangling
    /ˈraŋɡlɪŋ/

    noun

    • 1. engagement in a long, complicated dispute or argument: "weeks of political wrangling"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. the activity of taking care of, controlling, or moving animals, especially large animals such as cows or horses: A display of wild horse wrangling attracted thousands of visitors in northeastern Germany. The actor had to learn cattle wrangling skills for his new movie. More examples.

  3. to take care of or deal with someone or something, usually when this is difficult: I was raised in a house where my father worked long hours, and my mother stayed home, wrangling kids, cooking, cleaning, washing clothes. She has to wrangle classes of over 30 students.

  4. The meaning of WRANGLE is to dispute angrily or peevishly : bicker. How to use wrangle in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Wrangle.

  5. To grasp and maneuver (something); wrestle: "the especially agile ironworkers whose task was to snatch steel from the sky as it came sailing in on the boom of the derrick, then wrangle it into the building's frame" (Jim Rasenberger). n. 1. The act of wrangling. 2. An angry, noisy argument or dispute.

  6. noun. dispute and argument. There was some wrangling between creditors about who was to blame. Collins English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers. Examples of 'wrangling' in a sentence. wrangling.

  7. 3 days ago · Definitions of wrangling. noun. an instance of intense argument (as in bargaining) synonyms: haggle, haggling, wrangle. see more.

  8. Wrangle definition: to argue or dispute, especially in a noisy or angry manner.. See examples of WRANGLE used in a sentence.

  9. If you say that someone is wrangling with someone over a question or issue, you mean that they have been arguing angrily for quite a long time about it. The two sides have spent most of their time wrangling over procedural problems.

  10. To wrangle is to take part in a long, angry, intense argument, especially over an issue with lots of details. You can also wrangle, or herd, a bunch of cows. Politicians and lawyers frequently wrangle, no cows necessary.

  11. noun. dispute and argument. There was some wrangling between creditors about who was to blame. Collins English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers. Examples of 'wrangling' in a sentence. wrangling.