Word
Of
The
Day
imbroglio
imbroglio \im-BROHL-yoh\
noun
Imbroglio is a formal word that refers to a complex dispute or argument.
// Much of the sisters’ text thread involves the latest
imbroglios on their favorite reality show—who’s mad at who for what, and why.
See the entry >
Examples:
“A tangled web of interpersonal feuds, played out in letters to the local newspaper, in social media posts and via legal filings in county court, has left the town with no clear path out of a situation that’s not covered by state law. The
imbroglio has even reached the state Capitol ...” — Seth Klamann and Sam Tabachnik,
The Denver Post, 8 Mar. 2026
Did you know?
Ever noticed how an imbroglio
embroils people in controversy? There’s a reason for that—an etymological one, anyway. Both the noun
imbroglio (referring to, among other things, a scandal or bitter argument) and verb
embroil (“to involve in conflicts or difficulties”) come from the Middle French word
embrouiller, a combination of the prefix
en- and
brouiller, meaning “to jumble,” though they took slightly different paths.
Embroil’s was direct, passing from Middle French through French and into English around the turn of the 16th century. Italians altered
embrouiller to form
imbrogliare, meaning “to entangle,” which spawned the noun
imbroglio that English speakers embraced in the mid-18th century. English
imbroglio first referred to a confused mass, and later expanded to cover confusing social situations such as complicated disputes, misunderstandings, and scandals.