Tug-of-war
noun
1.
an athletic contest between two teams at opposite ends of a rope, each team trying to drag the other over a line.
2.
a hard-fought, critical struggle for supremacy.
noun
1.
a contest in which two people or teams pull opposite ends of a rope in an attempt to drag the opposition over a central line
2.
any hard struggle, esp between two equally matched factions
A struggle for supremacy, as in There’s a constant political tug of war between those who favor giving more power to the states and those who want a strong federal government. Although there is an athletic contest also so named, in which participants holding either end of a rope try to pull each other across a dividing line, the present usage, first recorded in 1677, predates it by about two centuries. The noun tug itself means “a strenuous contest between two sides,” and war refers to fighting, either physical or figurative.
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