If you're going to just reword everything...
Hey, you could have specified the context in the first place, then we wouldn't be here right now, quibbling over the details.
Either way, the point is established, I would be cautious about using that example.
I'm not the OP. >_>
"Either way, the point is established, [that being that] I would be cautious about using that example."
The paper focused on domestic violence, so I am looking for examples of female-on-male violence where the people involves are involved in a romantic relationship. (Or, in the case of Wedding Crashers mentioned above, get into a romantic relationship.) Stan and Dorothy from Golden Girls is a good example. Wedding Crashers is another one. I don't follow anime, but from another comment, I get the impression many of the examples given would not work because the people involved are not romantically involved.
To go over my examples:
Yusuke & Kayko don't admit it, but they're basically dating, & they finally admit what everyone already knew at the end of the series.
Ed & Winry also get together at the end of the series, in fact Ed makes the first move.
Inuyasha & Kagome, I believe, get together at the end.
Dragonball Z, Chi-Chi & Goku are married, Hell, that might've been when the abuse started, I don't remember Dragonball too well.
Naruto & Sakura are not in a relationship, though not for Naruto's lack of trying.
Bleach is the exception of the things I listed. Despite what shippers might tell you, no romance is being implied yet.
The common thread here is that they get together at the end.