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brouhaha

[ US /ˈbɹuhɑˌhɑ/ ]
[ UK /bɹa‍ʊhˈɑːhɐ/ ]
NOUN
  1. loud confused noise from many sources
  2. a confused disturbance far greater than its cause merits

How To Use brouhaha In A Sentence

  • Davey Holmes's play More Lies About Jerzy recounts the main brouhahas without much fresh insight or dramatic interest.
  • What was lost amid the brouhaha about Martin's background was the display of arcane tradition that his election symbolised.
  • The almost daily banana brouhahas had taken their inevitable toll on the island's economy.
  • I begged him not to say anything to Mother, knowing the way such things could and did turn into small town brouhahas.
  • And the whole Thotsakan brouhaha looks daft from a Western perspective, but a lot of people here in Thailand do take this sort of thing very seriously. The Wrath of Khon
  • Mielke started the brouhaha with complaints that Mager "jeopardized" the county by violating … Spokesman.com: Latest stories
  • A few people have suggested that the whole brouhaha over the contracts is largely symbolic since even countries that are barred from bidding on the top-tier contracts can bid on the subcontracts.
  • I'm not necessarily interested in wading into the brouhaha over whether Bush's remarks in Jerusalem yesterday were an implicit attack on Barack Obama. Jonathan Alter's Uninterrupted Partisanship - Real Clear Politics – TIME.com
  • Amid the brouhaha of raised voices I didn't dare speak up — in Scots-accented French — to suggest more sedentary but perhaps more efficacious means, such as a lawyer's letter. It's Lights, Camera, Strike in France
  • Last week he listened to various angles around the Dunsink brouhaha, as well as stirring up a campaign to open Croke Park to non-Gaelic sports.
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