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  1. hassle: 1 n disorderly fighting Synonyms: dogfight , rough-and-tumble , scuffle , tussle Type of: combat , fight , fighting , scrap the act of fighting; any contest or struggle n an angry disturbance Synonyms: bother , fuss , trouble Type of: disturbance , perturbation activity that is a malfunction, intrusion, or interruption v annoy ...

  2. 1. hassle (bother): hassle. Mühe f kein pl. hassle. Theater nt kein pl ugs. parking in town is such a hassle. in der Stadt zu parken ist vielleicht ein Aufstand. it's one of the few bars that women can go in and not get any hassle. das ist eine der wenigen Bars, in die Frauen gehen können, ohne belästigt zu werden.

  3. Hassle definition: a disorderly dispute.. See examples of HASSLE used in a sentence.

  4. Earliest known use. 1900s. The earliest known use of the verb hassle is in the 1900s. OED's earliest evidence for hassle is from 1901, in the writing of E. G. Hayden. hassle is perhaps an imitative or expressive formation. Perhaps a variant or alteration of another lexical item. Etymons: hustle v. See etymology.

  5. Vor 2 Tagen · noun. 1. a disorderly dispute. 2. a problem brought about by pressures of time, money, inconvenience, etc. Finding a decent place to have lunch in this neighborhood is always a hassle. intransitive verb. 3. to dispute or quarrel.

  6. has·sle (hăs′əl) Informal n. 1. An argument or a fight. 2. Trouble; bother. v. has·sled, has·sling, has·sles v.intr. To argue or fight: customers hassling with ...

  7. has·sle. n. 1. An argument or a fight. 2. Trouble; bother. To argue or fight: customers hassling with merchants over high prices. To bother or harass: street gangs hassling passersby. [From American dialectal (Southeast) hassle, to pant (as from exertion), perhaps of imitative origin or akin to British dialectal hassle, to hack at, saw away at ...