Brawn - Wiktionary

See also: Brawn

English

[edit] WOTD – 28 December 2012, 28 December 2013, 28 December 2014
Brawn (terrine)

Etymology

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From Middle English brawne, from Old French braon (slice of meat, fleshy part, buttock), from Frankish *brādon, *brādan, accusative form of *brādō (roasted meat, ham), from Proto-Germanic *brēdô (meat, roast), of uncertain further origin, but possibly from Proto-Indo-European *bʰreh₁- (to burn, heat).

Akin to Old High German brāto (tender meat) (German Braten (roast)), Old English brǣde, brǣd (flesh, meat), Old Norse bráð (raw meat).

Pronunciation

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  • (UK) IPA(key): /bɹɔːn/
  • (US) IPA(key): /bɹɔn/
  • (cotcaught merger) IPA(key): /bɹɑn/
  • Audio (US):(file)
  • Audio (General Australian):(file)
  • Rhymes: -ɔːn

Noun

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brawn (countable and uncountable, plural brawns)

  1. Strong muscles or lean flesh, especially of the arm, leg or thumb.
  2. Physical strength; muscularity. The builders at the site had more brawn than brain.
    • 2000, Stephanie Laurens, A Secret Love, Avon Books, published 2000, →ISBN, page 349:The man was a bruiser, the sort who'd learned his science in tavern brawls. Given his size and lack of agility, he relied on his brawn to win. In any wrestling match, Crowley would triumph easily.
    • 2008, Michael Mandaville, Stealing Thunder, Dog Ear Publishing, published 2008, →ISBN, page 562:The two men were husky, picked for their brawn by the little man who sauntered into the room.
    • 2010, Martin Pasko, Robert Greenberger, The Essential Superman Encyclopedia, Del Ray, published 2010, →ISBN, page 218:The youth agreed to the scheme and used his brawn to begin moving pieces into place, starting by moving the planet Rann into the Thanagarian star system []
  3. (chiefly British) Head cheese; a terrine made from the head of a pig or calf; originally boar's meat.
    • 1820, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Oedipus Tyrannus; Or, Swellfoot The Tyrant: A Tragedy in Two Acts:Now if your Majesty would have our bristlesTo bind your mortar with, or fill our colonsWith rich blood, or make brawn out of our gristles,In policy—ask else your royal Solons—You ought to give us hog-wash and clean straw,And sties well thatched; besides it is the law!
    • 1978, Jane Gardam, God on the Rocks, Abacus, published 2014, page 111:It was brawn and shape for high tea.
  4. (UK, dialectal) A boar.
    • 1821, John Stagg, The Cumbrian Minstrel: Being a Poetical Miscellany:And loud as brawns wer [they] snoring,
    • 1842, Moses Aaron Richardson, The Borderer's Table Book: Or, Gatherings of the Local History:THE village of Brancepath, pleasantly situated at the distance of four miles and three- quarters south-west by west of Durham, is said to have derived its name (a corruption of Brawn's-path) from a brawn of vast size, [...]

Derived terms

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  • brawny

Translations

[edit] strong muscles
  • Armenian: մկաններ pl (mkanner), մկանունք (hy) (mkanunkʻ), դնդերք (hy) (dnderkʻ)
  • Bulgarian: мускули (bg) pl (muskuli), физическа сила (fizičeska sila)
  • Czech: svaly m pl
  • Dutch: spierkracht (nl), spieren (nl)
  • Finnish: lihakset (fi), lihasmassa
  • French: muscle (fr) m [uncountable]
  • German: Muskelkraft (de) f
  • Greek: ποντίκι (el) n (pontíki)
  • Latin: torus m
  • Middle English: brawne
  • Old English: līra m
  • Polish: silne mięśnie nvir pl
  • Romanian: mușchi (ro) m
  • Russian: мускулы (muskuly), мышцы (ru) (myšcy)
  • Serbo-Croatian: mišićavost f, muskuloznost (sh) f
physical strength, muscularity
  • Armenian: ֆիզիկական ուժ (fizikakan už)
  • Chinese: Mandarin: 膂力 (zh) (lǚlì)
  • Czech: fyzická síla, svaly m pl
  • Finnish: voima (fi), lihasvoima, massa (fi)
  • French: muscle (fr) m [uncountable]
  • Greek: δύναμη (el) f (dýnami)
  • Malayalam: കരുത്ത് (ml) (karuttŭ)
  • Māori: pakaua
  • Polish: muskularość f, krzepa (pl) f, tężyzna (pl) f
  • Russian: мускулистость (ru) f (muskulistostʹ)
  • Serbo-Croatian: gruba snaga f
  • Swedish: muskelstyrka c, muskelkraft (sv) c
terrine
  • Bulgarian: пача f (pača)
  • Czech: tlačenka (cs) f, sulc (cs) m, huspenina (cs) f
  • Dutch: zult (nl) m, hoofdkaas (nl) m
  • Estonian: sült
  • Finnish: syltty (fi)
  • French: fromage de tête (fr) m, tête pressée (fr) f, tête marbrée f, tête fromagée f, hure (fr) f
  • Galician: cacheira prensada (gl) f
  • German: Sülze (de)
  • Greek: πηχτή (el) f (pichtí)
  • Hungarian: disznósajt (hu), disznófősajt
  • Irish: toirceoil f
  • Macedonian: шваргла f (švargla)
  • Norwegian: sylte m
  • Polish: salceson (pl) m
  • Serbo-Croatian: tlačenica (sh) f
  • Spanish: queso de cabeza (es) m, cabeza de jabalí
  • Swedish: sylta (sv) c
  • Welsh: caws pen mochyn m

See also

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  • aspic

Verb

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brawn (third-person singular simple present brawns, present participle brawning, simple past and past participle brawned)

  1. (transitive) Make fat, especially of a boar.
  2. (intransitive) Become fat, especially of a boar.

Derived terms

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  • brawner

Translations

[edit] to make fat
  • Bulgarian: угоявам (bg) (ugojavam)
  • Finnish: lihottaa (fi)
  • Polish: tuczyć (pl) impf, utuczyć (pl) pf
  • Serbo-Croatian: ugojiti se (sh)
to become fat
  • Finnish: lihoa (fi)
  • Polish: tuczyć się impf, utuczyć się pf
  • Serbo-Croatian: ugojiti se (sh)

Middle English

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Noun

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brawn

  1. alternative form of brawne

Tag » What Does The Word Brawn Mean