broach
verb /brəʊtʃ/
  /brəʊtʃ/
Verb Forms
| present simple I / you / we / they broach |    /brəʊtʃ/   /brəʊtʃ/  | 
| he / she / it broaches |    /ˈbrəʊtʃɪz/   /ˈbrəʊtʃɪz/  | 
| past simple broached |    /brəʊtʃt/   /brəʊtʃt/  | 
| past participle broached |    /brəʊtʃt/   /brəʊtʃt/  | 
| -ing form broaching |    /ˈbrəʊtʃɪŋ/   /ˈbrəʊtʃɪŋ/  | 
- broach something (to/with somebody) to begin talking about a subject that is difficult to discuss, especially because it is embarrassing or because people disagree about it
- She was dreading having to broach the subject of money to her father.
 - The report fails to broach some important questions.
 
Oxford Collocations DictionaryBroach is used with these nouns as the object:- matter
 - subject
 - topic
 - …
 
Word OriginMiddle English: from Old French brochier, based on Latin brocchus, broccus ‘projecting’. The earliest recorded sense was ‘prick with spurs’, generally ‘pierce’. The current sense is a figurative use of this and dates from the late 16th cent.