Both spellings "quarreling" and "quarrelling" are recognized by the dictionary - the spelling with a single L is the spelling most popular in American English, while the spelling with a double L is most popular in the British English.
The US spelling is quarreled (fought, argued). The UK spelling is quarrelled.
Quarreled
no
true
The past tense is quarrelled.
Propelled a boat with oars, or quarrelled with someone
Propelled a boat with oars, or quarrelled with someone
I quarreled with the teacher today,but I didn't win!!!!
she had none though she and cupid quarrelled alot
The verb of quarrelsome is quarrel, quarrels, quarrelling and quarrelled. It depends on the tense you require.Some examples are:"The pair quarrel all the time"."He quarrels with his brother"."They are quarrelling again"."We quarrelled yesterday".
Yes, the word quarrel is both a noun and a verb. For example: Noun: The quarrel was not serious, we're still good friends. Verb: Don't quarrel when you can discuss the problem.