
Annotation:
As an idiom, this means "it takes two people to argue or fight." (You can't have a fight, unless both of you are fighting.)

相手のない喧嘩はできぬ

In Danish, this term is used in a broader sense:
a joint activity requires effort from both parties

I think some people may use it that way in English, too, but I think every time I've heard it used, it had the meaning mentioned above.


Duplicates of this sentence have been deleted:
x #12833394
Tags
View all tagsLists
Sentence text
License: CC BY 2.0 FRAudio
Logs
This sentence is original and was not derived from translation.
added by CK, August 13, 2011
linked by arcticmonkey, August 13, 2011
linked by armandaneshjoo, August 13, 2011
linked by yessoos, August 14, 2011
linked by duran, October 3, 2011
linked by sacredceltic, December 2, 2011
linked by sacredceltic, December 2, 2011
added by Dejo, November 4, 2012
linked by Dejo, November 4, 2012
linked by Alois, November 4, 2012
linked by Alois, November 4, 2012
linked by Eldad, November 4, 2012
linked by Tamy, November 22, 2012
linked by Tamy, November 22, 2012
linked by Pfirsichbaeumchen, November 22, 2012
linked by AlanF_US, February 25, 2015
linked by bandeirante, July 12, 2015
linked by pchamorro, August 4, 2015
linked by Selena777, January 19, 2016
linked by Amazigh7, October 28, 2019
linked by Amazigh7, October 28, 2019
linked by Horus, October 28, 2019
linked by podcast, April 27, 2020
linked by shekitten, February 7, 2021
linked by shekitten, February 7, 2021
linked by Adelpa, February 27, 2021
linked by drowsykush, July 18, 2021
linked by drowsykush, July 18, 2021
linked by drowsykush, July 18, 2021
linked by soliloquist, July 18, 2021
linked by soliloquist, July 18, 2021
linked by danepo, November 2, 2023
linked by Tanama, October 24, 2024
linked by Horus, November 20, 2024
linked by nuclearmaple, January 5, 2025
linked by Adelpa, March 4, 2025