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dǎ jià
sep-v. to fight, to have a brawl; to conflict or contradict
80%     120%

Simplified Chinese

Traditional Chinese

Simplified stroke orders are based on the 'Standard of National Commonly-used Mandarin Chinese Characters (现代汉语通用字笔顺规范)', issued by the China National Language and Character Working Committee (国家语言文字工作委员会) on April 7th 1997. Traditional stroke orders are based on information issued by the Taiwan Ministry of Education.
EXAMPLES
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wó yǎng le yì zhī māo hé yì zhī gǒu, dàn tā men lǎo shì dǎ jià .
phr. I have a dog and a cat, but they fight with each other all the time.
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tā yīn dǎ jià bèi dài bǔ .
phr. He was arrested because of fighting.
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tā jīng cháng dǎ jià,kěn dìng shì jiā jiào bù hǎo
phr. He often fought with others and he surely didn't get a good family education.
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tā tuō diào wài tào, bǎi chū dǎ jià de jià shì .
phr. He took off his coat and assumed a fighting posture.
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dǎ jià de nà liǎng gè xué shēng kàn dào lǎo shī jìn lái mǎ shang jiù zhù shǒu le .
phr. The two students stopped fighting immediately when they saw the teacher come in.
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tā shuō de huà qián hòu dǎ jià, kěn dìng shì jiǎ de !
phr. What he said contradicts itself, (so it) must be untruthful!