The Eighty-ninth Congress was potentially more fertile ground for the broad range of controversial programs on his dream agenda.
Thank Congress, Not LBJ for Great Society|Julian Zelizer, Scott Porch|January 4, 2015|DAILY BEAST
Our time is so vastly different in its particulars that the parallels work only in broad strokes.
American Democracy Under Threat for 250 Years|Jedediah Purdy|December 28, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Then, under the bold headline “Rebooting Spider-Man,” Robinov describes a broad vision for the future of the franchise.
Exclusive: Sony Hack Reveals Studio's Detailed Plans For Another ‘Spider-Man’ Reboot|William Boot|December 13, 2014|DAILY BEAST
This could create tremendous opportunity for a broad swath of the rustbelt population.
The Rustbelt Roars Back From the Dead|Joel Kotkin, Richey Piiparinen|December 7, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Its reporting and commentary on politics, society, and arts and letters have nurtured a broad liberal spirit in our national life.
Facebook Prince Purges The New Republic: Inside the Destruction of a 100-Year-Old Magazine|Lloyd Grove|December 5, 2014|DAILY BEAST
It was thirty-five feet long by fifteen broad, and twenty-two feet high.
Kate Carnegie and Those Ministers|Ian Maclaren
Rural Russia was organized on a democratic principle which still prevails throughout that broad land.
Historic Tales, Vol. 8 (of 15)|Charles Morris
The building is so far beyond any familiar proportions that at first sight all details are lost upon its broad front.
Ave Roma Immortalis, Vol. 2|Francis Marion Crawford
On the terrace beyond several children were playing, while before him, for many a mile, lay his own broad lands.
The Ruined Cities of Zululand|Hugh Mulleneux Walmsley
About this period there was a ponderous machine with six broad wheels, and drawn by eight horses, called the Newcastle waggon.
Coaching, with Anecdotes of the Road|William Pitt Lennox
British Dictionary definitions for broad (1 of 2)
broad
/ (brɔːd) /
adjective
having relatively great breadth or width
of vast extent; spaciousa broad plain
(postpositive)from one side to the otherfour miles broad
of great scope or potentialthat invention had broad applications
not detailed; generalbroad plans
clear and open; full (esp in the phrase broad daylight)
obvious or plainbroad hints
liberal; toleranta broad political stance
widely spread; extensivebroad support
outspoken or bolda broad manner
vulgar; coarse; indecenta broad joke
unrestrained; freebroad laughter
(of a dialect or pronunciation) consisting of a large number of speech sounds characteristic of a particular geographical areaa broad Yorkshire accent
financedenoting an assessment of liquidity as including notes and coin in circulation with the public, banks' till money and balances, most private-sector bank deposits, and sterling bank-deposit certificatesbroad money Compare narrow (def. 7)
phonetics
of or relating to a type of pronunciation transcription in which symbols correspond approximately to phonemes without taking account of allophonic variations
broad athe long vowel in English words such as father, half, as represented in the received pronunciation of Southern British English
as broad as it is longamounting to the same thing; without advantage either way
noun
the broad part of something
slang, mainlyUS and Canadian
a girl or woman
a prostitute
Britishdialecta river spreading over a lowlandSee also Broads
East Angliandialecta shallow lake
a wood-turning tool used for shaping the insides and bottoms of cylinders
adverb
widely or fullybroad awake
Derived forms of broad
broadly, adverbbroadness, noun
Word Origin for broad
Old English brād; related to Old Norse breithr, Old Frisian brēd, Old High German breit, Gothic braiths