Subjected to such an embroilment, how could Zimmerman symbolize the franchise's stability?
From the washingtonpost.com
Bumptious Interior Secretary James Watt found himself at the center of a new embroilment last week.
From the time.com
Until now, Barack Obama has been oddly shy of embroilment, partly because of the lack of a solid Israeli government.
From the economist.com
The same can be said of our current embroilment in Iraq against the wishes of the UN and nearly all the people of the world.
From the theatlantic.com
In addition, NATO admission of Georgia would then bind NATO into needless embroilment into Georgia's various territorial disputes in the Caucasus.
From the washingtontimes.com
Though he has not previously had any such deep involvement in urban problems, his embroilment in Detroit has caused him to switch his priorities.
From the time.com
The Egyptian involvement came in the wake of a diplomatic embroilment with Israel over the deaths of several Egyptian soldiers on Thursday.
From the stltoday.com
Many Americans would like the withdrawal of combat troops from Iraq to signal the beginning of the end of America's overall embroilment in the benighted regions of the world.
From the economist.com
As Christianity had been accepted by barbarian nobility, the Church sought to prevent ecclesiastical land and clergymen, both of which came from the nobility, from embroilment in martial conflicts.
From the en.wikipedia.org
More examples
Imbroglio: an intricate and confusing interpersonal or political situation
The condition of being embroiled in something; an imbroglio or entanglement