Noun
An intricate, complicated plot, as of a drama or work of fiction.
A complicated and embarrassing state of things; a serious misunderstanding.
Source: Webster's dictionary‘A statement issued by Bridget McKenzie on Thursday night opens brand new territory in this imbroglio, and things were already serious enough.’ Source: Internet
Following another casino imbroglio, he settled with a woman who accused him of sexually assaulting her at Tri-State Racetrack and Gaming Center in Charleston, W. Va. Then, in 2007, Whittaker said he could not pay because he was broke. Source: Internet
GPS, he said, later chose to help form the federal government with Perikatan Nasional to pull Malaysia back from the political imbroglio to face the Covid-19 pandemic and economic uncertainty. Source: Internet
Although House intelligence committee Republicans have given Trump a clean bill of health over whether his campaign conspired with the active measures, the imbroglio wore on. Source: Internet
As a filmmaker (and an occasional actor), Mendoza is saddened by the current imbroglio being talked about in the theater scene – the non-casting of Asians in a play set in China. Source: Internet
As publicly stated by past PMs and HMs they were requested to come up with a solution module to resolve Kashmir imbroglio that could be acceptable to the entire stakeholder. Source: Internet