n-flikt; n. kon-flikt]
| 1. | to come into collision or disagreement; be contradictory, at variance, or in opposition; clash: The account of one eyewitness conflicted with that of the other. My class conflicts with my going to the concert. |
| 2. | to fight or contend; do battle. |
| 3. | a fight, battle, or struggle, esp. a prolonged struggle; strife. |
| 4. | controversy; quarrel: conflicts between parties. |
| 5. | discord of action, feeling, or effect; antagonism or opposition, as of interests or principles: a conflict of ideas. |
| 6. | a striking together; collision. |
| 7. | incompatibility or interference, as of one idea, desire, event, or activity with another: a conflict in the schedule. |
| 8. | Psychiatry. a mental struggle arising from opposing demands or impulses. |

con·flict (kŏn'flĭkt') n.
[Middle English, from Latin cōnflīctus, collision, from past participle of cōnflīgere, to strike together : com-, com- + flīgere, to strike.] con·flic'tion n., con·flic'tive adj., con·flic'tu·al (kən-flĭk'chōō-əl) adj. Synonyms: These nouns denote struggle between opposing forces for victory or supremacy. Conflict applies both to open fighting between hostile groups and to a struggle between antithetical forces: "The kind of victory MacArthur had in mind . . . victory by expanding the conflict to all of China—would have been the wrong kind of victory" (Harry S. Truman). "Fortunately analysis is not the only way to resolve inner conflicts" (Karen Horney). |
conflict con·flict (kŏn'flĭkt')
n.
A psychic struggle between opposing or incompatible impulses, desires, or tendencies.