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单词 brief
释义

brief


brief

B0481000 (brēf)adj. brief·er, brief·est 1. Short in time, duration, length, or extent.2. Succinct; concise: a brief account of the incident.3. Curt; abrupt: We were upset because he was so brief with us.n.1. A short, succinct statement.2. A condensation or an abstract of a larger document or series of documents.3. Law A document concisely stating the legal points being made, including often the citation and explanation of supporting legal authority.4. Roman Catholic Church A papal letter that is not as formal as a bull.5. A briefing.6. often briefs Short, tight-fitting underpants.7. briefs Chiefly British The instructions that are given to explain a task or assignment.tr.v. briefed, brief·ing, briefs 1. To give instructions or preparatory information to: briefed the astronauts before the mission.2. To summarize.Idiom: in brief In short.
[Middle English bref, from Old French, from Latin brevis. N., Middle English bref, written communication, from Old French, from Medieval Latin breve, from Latin, neuter of brevis, short; see mregh-u- in Indo-European roots.]
brief′er n.brief′ly adv.brief′ness n.

brief

(briːf) adj1. short in duration: a brief holiday. 2. short in length or extent; scanty: a brief bikini. 3. abrupt in manner; brusque: the professor was brief with me this morning. 4. terse or concise; containing few words: he made a brief statement. n5. (Journalism & Publishing) a condensed or short statement or written synopsis; abstract6. (Law) law a document containing all the facts and points of law of a case by which a solicitor instructs a barrister to represent a client7. (Roman Catholic Church) RC Church a letter issuing from the Roman court written in modern characters, as contrasted with a papal bull; papal brief8. short for briefing9. (Rhetoric) a paper outlining the arguments and information on one side of a debate10. (Professions) slang Brit a lawyer, esp a barrister11. hold a brief for to argue for; champion12. in brief in short; to sum upvb (tr) 13. to prepare or instruct by giving a summary of relevant facts14. to make a summary or synopsis of15. (Law) English law a. to instruct (a barrister) by briefb. to retain (a barrister) as counsel16. (foll by: against) to supply potentially damaging or negative information regarding someone, as to the media, a politician, etc[C14: from Old French bref, from Latin brevis; related to Greek brakhus] ˈbriefly adv ˈbriefness n

brief

(brif)

adj. brief•er, brief•est,
n., v. adj. 1. lasting or taking a short time. 2. using few words; concise: a brief report. 3. abrupt; curt. 4. scanty: a brief bathing suit. n. 5. a short and concise statement or written item. 6. a. a memorandum of points of fact or of law for use in conducting a case. b. a written statement submitted to a court by counsel presenting the principal facts, points of law, and arguments related to a client's case. 7. an outline, summary. 8. briefs, (used with a pl. v.) close-fitting legless underpants with an elastic waistband. 9. a papal letter less formal than a bull. v.t. 10. to make an abstract or summary of. 11. to instruct by a brief or briefing. Idioms: in brief, in a few words; in short. [1250–1300; Middle English bref < Anglo-French, Old French < Latin brevis short; see breve] brief′er, n. brief′ly, adv. brief′ness, n. syn: See short. See also summary.

brief


Past participle: briefed
Gerund: briefing
Imperative
brief
brief
Present
I brief
you brief
he/she/it briefs
we brief
you brief
they brief
Preterite
I briefed
you briefed
he/she/it briefed
we briefed
you briefed
they briefed
Present Continuous
I am briefing
you are briefing
he/she/it is briefing
we are briefing
you are briefing
they are briefing
Present Perfect
I have briefed
you have briefed
he/she/it has briefed
we have briefed
you have briefed
they have briefed
Past Continuous
I was briefing
you were briefing
he/she/it was briefing
we were briefing
you were briefing
they were briefing
Past Perfect
I had briefed
you had briefed
he/she/it had briefed
we had briefed
you had briefed
they had briefed
Future
I will brief
you will brief
he/she/it will brief
we will brief
you will brief
they will brief
Future Perfect
I will have briefed
you will have briefed
he/she/it will have briefed
we will have briefed
you will have briefed
they will have briefed
Future Continuous
I will be briefing
you will be briefing
he/she/it will be briefing
we will be briefing
you will be briefing
they will be briefing
Present Perfect Continuous
I have been briefing
you have been briefing
he/she/it has been briefing
we have been briefing
you have been briefing
they have been briefing
Future Perfect Continuous
I will have been briefing
you will have been briefing
he/she/it will have been briefing
we will have been briefing
you will have been briefing
they will have been briefing
Past Perfect Continuous
I had been briefing
you had been briefing
he/she/it had been briefing
we had been briefing
you had been briefing
they had been briefing
Conditional
I would brief
you would brief
he/she/it would brief
we would brief
you would brief
they would brief
Past Conditional
I would have briefed
you would have briefed
he/she/it would have briefed
we would have briefed
you would have briefed
they would have briefed
Thesaurus
Noun1.brief - a document stating the facts and points of law of a client's casebrief - a document stating the facts and points of law of a client's caselegal brieflegal document, legal instrument, official document, instrument - (law) a document that states some contractual relationship or grants some rightamicus curiae brief - a brief presented by someone interested in influencing the outcome of a lawsuit but who is not a party to itlaw, jurisprudence - the collection of rules imposed by authority; "civilization presupposes respect for the law"; "the great problem for jurisprudence to allow freedom while enforcing order"
2.brief - a condensed written summary or abstractprecis, synopsis, abstract, outline - a sketchy summary of the main points of an argument or theory
Verb1.brief - give essential information to someone; "The reporters were briefed about the President's plan to invade"apprise, apprize, instruct - make aware of; "Have the students been apprised of the tuition hike?"
Adj.1.brief - of short duration or distance; "a brief stay in the country"short - primarily temporal sense; indicating or being or seeming to be limited in duration; "a short life"; "a short flight"; "a short holiday"; "a short story"; "only a few short months"
2.brief - concise and succinct; "covered the matter in a brief statement"concise - expressing much in few words; "a concise explanation"
3.brief - (of clothing) very shortbrief - (of clothing) very short; "an abbreviated swimsuit"; "a brief bikini"abbreviatedshort - (primarily spatial sense) having little length or lacking in length; "short skirts"; "short hair"; "the board was a foot short"; "a short toss"

brief

adjective1. short, fast, quick, temporary, fleeting, swift, short-lived, little, hasty, momentary, ephemeral, quickie (informal), transitory This time their visit is brief.
short long, extensive, lengthy, protracted
2. concise, short, limited, to the point, crisp, compressed, terse, curt, laconic, succinct, clipped, pithy, thumbnail, monosyllabic Write a very brief description of a typical problem.
concise long, detailed, lengthy, diffuse, long-winded, long-drawn-out, circuitous
3. curt, short, sharp, blunt, abrupt, brusque He was brief, rapid, decisive.
verb1. inform, prime, prepare, advise, fill in (informal), instruct, clue in (informal), gen up (Brit. informal), put in the picture (informal), give a rundown, keep (soemone) posted, give the gen (Brit. informal) A spokesman briefed reporters.noun1. instructions, remit, briefing, guidelines, mandate, directive Hughes will be given the brief of man-marking Francesco Totti.2. summary, résumé, outline, sketch, abstract, summing-up, digest, epitome, rundown, synopsis, précis, recapitulation, abridgment He gives me my first brief of the situation.3. case, defence, argument, data, contention a lawyer's briefin brief4. briefly, in summary, in synopsis, in digest form And now sport in brief.5. in short, briefly, in essence, in a word, in a nutshell, to sum up, to come to the point, to put it briefly In brief, take no risks.

brief

adjective1. Not long in time or duration:short.2. Accomplished in very little time:expeditious, fast, flying, hasty, hurried, quick, rapid, short, speedy, swift.3. Marked by or consisting of few words that are carefully chosen:compendious, concise, laconic, lean, short, succinct, summary, terse.4. Rudely unceremonious:abrupt, blunt, brusque, crusty, curt, gruff, short, short-spoken.nounA short summary or version prepared by cutting down a larger work:abridgment, abstract, condensation, epitome, synopsis.
Translations
向...下达指示向…介绍基本情况概要短暂的简短的

brief

(briːf) adjective not long; short. a brief visit; a brief account. 短暫的 短暂的 noun a short statement of facts (especially in a lawsuit, of a client's case). a lawyer's brief. 概要 概要 verb to give detailed instructions to (especially a barrister, group of soldiers etc). The astronauts were briefed before the space mission. 向...提供詳細指示 向…介绍基本情况,向...下达指示 ˈbriefing noun instructions and information. The pilots were given a briefing before they left. 簡報會 情况简介,简报 ˈbriefly adverbHe told me briefly what he knew. 簡要地 简要地briefs noun plural (used especially in shops) women's pants or men's underpants. a pair of briefs. 短褲 短裤brevity (ˈbrevəti) noun shortness (of speech, writing, time etc). He is well known for the brevity of his speeches. 簡短 简短ˈbriefcase noun a light case for papers, made of leather etc. a businessman's briefcase. 公事包 公文包in brief in a few words. In brief, we have been successful. 簡而言之 简言之

brief

简短的zhCN

brief


brief (someone) about (someone or something)

To tell someone key information about someone or something, often an issue or situation. Please brief me about the candidate that I'll be interviewing this afternoon. Someone needs to brief the CEO about the investigation before he speaks to the media.See also: brief

in brief

In summary; to say it briefly. The film was, in brief, dull. If you can, please explain it in brief.See also: brief

hold no brief for (someone or something)

To be unable or unwilling to tolerate or support someone or something. The senator has stated numerous times that he holds no brief for the "rights" of big corporations. The boss holds no brief for slackers.See also: brief, hold, no

in snatches

In or for brief periods of time. I caught the speech in snatches, but the kids were screaming in the other room so I couldn't hear the TV properly. I was so anxious about how to pay for the car repairs that I only slept in snatches.See also: snatch

brief someone about someone or something

 and brief someone on someone or somethingto tell someone a summary with the essential details about someone or something. We need to brief the president about the latest event. I have to brief Michael on the new procedures at work.See also: brief

hold no brief for someone or something

not to tolerate someone or something; to be opposed to someone or something. I hold no brief for Wally and his friends. Rachel holds no brief for that kind of thing.See also: brief, hold, no

in brief

briefly; concisely. The whole story, in brief, is that Bob failed algebra because he did not study. Please tell me in brief why you want this job.See also: brief

hold no brief for

Refuse to support, dislike, as in I hold no brief for liars. This term is a negative version of the legal expression hold a brief for, meaning "to support or defend a position by argument." The noun brief has been used in this way since the 1200s. See also: brief, hold, no

in brief

Also, in short; in a word. Concisely, in few words, to sum up. All three phrases usually precede or follow a summary statement, as in In brief, we didn't get much out of his speech, or There was no agenda; in short, they could discuss whatever they wanted to, or The sun was shining, the sky was clear-in a word, it was a beautiful day. The first expression dates from the early 1400s; in short dates from the 1300s but the present usage dates from the 1700s; the hyperbolic in a word (since there is nearly always more than one word) dates from the late 1500s. See also: brief

hold no brief for something

BRITISH, FORMALIf you hold no brief for a person, organization, activity or belief, you do not support them or respect them. This newspaper holds no special brief for a committee that has done nothing to distinguish itself in the past. He holds no brief for formal education. Note: In law, a brief is all the papers relating to a particular client's case that are collected by the client's solicitor and given to the barrister who will represent them in court. See also: brief, hold, no, something

in brief

COMMON If someone says or writes something in brief, they use as few words as possible and do not give many details. This in brief is how I see the situation at the moment. The disease is discussed in brief here.See also: brief

hold no brief for

not support or argue in favour of. The brief referred to is the summary of the facts and legal points in a case given to a barrister to argue in court.See also: brief, hold, no

hold no ˈbrief for somebody/something

(formal) not be in favour of or not support somebody/something, for example a cause, an idea, etc: I hold no brief for long prison sentences but this terrible crime really deserves one. Brief in this expression is the summary of facts and legal points in a case that is given to a lawyer to argue in a court. If a lawyer ‘holds no brief for’ a person, company, etc. this is not one of their clients/cases.See also: brief, hold, no, somebody, something

in ˈbrief

in a few words: I won’t give a you a long history of the dispute; in brief, it led to the business closing.And now, the news in brief.See also: brief

in ˈsnatches

for short periods rather than continuously: Sleep came to him in brief snatches. OPPOSITE: at a stretchSee also: snatch

in brief

In short.See also: brief

hold no brief for, to

To refuse to endorse, support, or defend. The term comes from law, where to hold a brief for someone means to act as counsel for that person and to argue in his or her favor. The negative form of the expression became extremely common in the nineteenth century. The OED cites R. A. Knox writing in Spiritual Aeneid (1918): “When I was at Balliol we used to adopt the phrase ‘I hold no brief for so-and-so.’”See also: brief, hold, no

brief


brief

1. Law a document containing all the facts and points of law of a case by which a solicitor instructs a barrister to represent a client 2. RC Church a letter issuing from the Roman court written in modern characters, as contrasted with a papal bull; papal brief

Brief

An early text editor for DOS programming from Borland. It provided automatic indentation and the ability to edit different parts of a source program at the same time.

brief


brief

(bref) [Fr. bref fr L. brevis, short, brief, a catalogue] 1. A condensed legal argument in legal format and style.2. A written or spoken summary of an important or complex topic; an abstract.3. To make a written or spoken summary of.4. To conduct a short session of instruction or preparation for a person, crew, or staff on how to accomplish an upcoming operation. See: debrief

brief


Brief

A summary of the important points of a longer document. An abstract of a published judicial opinion prepared by a law student as part of an assignment in the Case Method study of law. A written document drawn up by an attorney for a party in a lawsuit or by a party himself or herself appearing pro se that concisely states the following: (1) issues of a lawsuit; (2) facts that bring the parties to court; (3) relevant laws that can affect the subject of the dispute; and (4) arguments that explain how the law applies to the particular facts so that the case will be decided in the party's favor.

A brief may also contain a synopsis of the evidence and name the witnesses to be presented during the trial. Copies of briefs must be submitted to the court where the case will be heard and to the opposing party.

An appellate brief is a writing that must be filed with an appellate court so that the court may evaluate whether the decision of the lower court should be reversed because of some error or impropriety that occurred during the trial. A statement of the issues presented for review, a summary of how pertinent laws affect the facts, and a statement of the relief being requested are essential elements of an appellate brief. The appellee's brief will argue that the lower court acted properly in its judgment and request its affirmance, while the appellant's brief will attempt to convince the court to reverse or vacate the lower court's judgment because it acted improperly.

See also the Milestones in the Law and Appendix volumes for examples.

brief

1) n. a written legal argument, usually in a format prescribed by the courts, stating the legal reasons for the suit based on statutes, regulations, case precedents, legal texts, and reasoning applied to facts in the particular situation. A brief is submitted to lay out the argument for various petitions and motions before the court (sometimes called "points and authorities"), to counter the arguments of opposing lawyers, and to provide the judge or judges with reasons to rule in favor of the party represented by the brief writer. Occasionally on minor or follow-up legal issues, the judge will specify that a letter or memorandum brief will be sufficient. On appeals and certain other major arguments, the brief is bound with color-coded covers stipulated in state and/or federal court rules. Ironically, although the term was originally intended to mean a brief or summary argument (shorter than an oral presentation), legal briefs are quite often notoriously long. 2) v. to summarize a precedent case or lay out in writing a legal argument. Attentive law students "brief" each case in their casebooks, which means extracting the rule of law, the reasoning (rationale), the essential facts, and the outcome. 3) to give a summary of important information to another person. (See: precedent)

brief

1 in England, the papers given to a barrister to conduct a case or the act of instructing. 2 colloquially, a barrister. 3 (US) a document submitted to a court in support of a case.

It usually involves a history of the case in question and presents arguments and authority.

BRIEF, eccl. law. The name of a kind of papal rescript. Briefs are writings sealed with wax, and differ in this respect from bulls, (q. v.) which are scaled with lead. They are so called, because they usually are short compendious writings. Ayl. Parerg. 132. See Breve.

BRIEF, practice. An abridged statement of a party's case.
2. It should contain : 1st. A statement of the names of the parties, and of their residence and occupation, the character in which they sue and are sued, and wherefore they prosecute or resist the action. 2d. An abridgment of all the pleadings. 3d. A regular, chronological, and methodical statement of the facts in plain common language. 4th. A summary of the points or questions in issue, and of the proof which is to support such issues, mentioning specially the names of the witnesses by which the facts are to be proved, or if there be written evidence, an abstract of such evidence. 5th. The personal character of the witnesses should be mentioned; whether the moral character is good or bad, whether they are naturally timid or over-zealous, whether firm or wavering. 6th. If known, the evidence of the opposite party, and such facts as are adapted to oppose, confute, or repel it. Perspicuity and conciseness are the most desirable qualities of a brief, but when the facts are material they cannot be too numerous when the argument is pertinent and weighty, it cannot be too extended.
3. Brief is also used in the sense of breve. (q. v.)

BRIEF


AcronymDefinition
BRIEFBehavior Rating Inventory of Executive Functioning (psychological assessment)
BRIEFBasic Reconfigurable Interactive Editing Facility
BRIEFBusiness Review Indonesia Forum

brief


  • all
  • adj
  • verb
  • noun
  • phrase

Synonyms for brief

adj short

Synonyms

  • short
  • fast
  • quick
  • temporary
  • fleeting
  • swift
  • short-lived
  • little
  • hasty
  • momentary
  • ephemeral
  • quickie
  • transitory

Antonyms

  • long
  • extensive
  • lengthy
  • protracted

adj concise

Synonyms

  • concise
  • short
  • limited
  • to the point
  • crisp
  • compressed
  • terse
  • curt
  • laconic
  • succinct
  • clipped
  • pithy
  • thumbnail
  • monosyllabic

Antonyms

  • long
  • detailed
  • lengthy
  • diffuse
  • long-winded
  • long-drawn-out
  • circuitous

adj curt

Synonyms

  • curt
  • short
  • sharp
  • blunt
  • abrupt
  • brusque

verb inform

Synonyms

  • inform
  • prime
  • prepare
  • advise
  • fill in
  • instruct
  • clue in
  • gen up
  • put in the picture
  • give a rundown
  • keep (soemone) posted
  • give the gen

noun instructions

Synonyms

  • instructions
  • remit
  • briefing
  • guidelines
  • mandate
  • directive

noun summary

Synonyms

  • summary
  • résumé
  • outline
  • sketch
  • abstract
  • summing-up
  • digest
  • epitome
  • rundown
  • synopsis
  • précis
  • recapitulation
  • abridgment

noun case

Synonyms

  • case
  • defence
  • argument
  • data
  • contention

phrase in brief: briefly

Synonyms

  • briefly
  • in summary
  • in synopsis
  • in digest form

phrase in brief: in short

Synonyms

  • in short
  • briefly
  • in essence
  • in a word
  • in a nutshell
  • to sum up
  • to come to the point
  • to put it briefly

Synonyms for brief

adj not long in time or duration

Synonyms

  • short

adj accomplished in very little time

Synonyms

  • expeditious
  • fast
  • flying
  • hasty
  • hurried
  • quick
  • rapid
  • short
  • speedy
  • swift

adj marked by or consisting of few words that are carefully chosen

Synonyms

  • compendious
  • concise
  • laconic
  • lean
  • short
  • succinct
  • summary
  • terse

adj rudely unceremonious

Synonyms

  • abrupt
  • blunt
  • brusque
  • crusty
  • curt
  • gruff
  • short
  • short-spoken

noun a short summary or version prepared by cutting down a larger work

Synonyms

  • abridgment
  • abstract
  • condensation
  • epitome
  • synopsis

Synonyms for brief

noun a document stating the facts and points of law of a client's case

Synonyms

  • legal brief

Related Words

  • legal document
  • legal instrument
  • official document
  • instrument
  • amicus curiae brief
  • law
  • jurisprudence

noun a condensed written summary or abstract

Related Words

  • precis
  • synopsis
  • abstract
  • outline

verb give essential information to someone

Related Words

  • apprise
  • apprize
  • instruct

adj of short duration or distance

Related Words

  • short

adj concise and succinct

Related Words

  • concise

adj (of clothing) very short

Synonyms

  • abbreviated

Related Words

  • short
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