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单词 brush
释义 brush
I. \ˈbrəsh\ noun
(-es)
Usage: often attributive
Etymology: Middle English brusch, from Middle French broce, from Old French, perhaps of Celtic origin; akin to Old Irish froech heather — more at brier
1. : brushwood
2.
 a. : scrub vegetation
 b. : land covered with scrub vegetation : brushland — often used with the
  < helped work cattle in the Florida brush — F.B.Gipson >
3. chiefly Australia : a dense growth of forest and undergrowth
II. transitive verb
(-ed/-ing/-es)
1. : to clear (land) of brush and undergrowth
 < brush the back forty >
2. : to use cut-off branches as supports for (vines and plants)
 < peas should be brushed >
III. noun
(-es)
Etymology: Middle English brusshe, from Middle French broisse, from Old French broce brushwood
1.
 a. : a hand-operated or power-driven tool or device composed of bristles set into a back or a handle or attached to a roller and designed or adapted for such uses as sweeping, scrubbing, painting, and smoothing
  < a floor brush >
  < a wire brush >
 b. : one of a pair of long slender devices of this kind with flexible wire bristles used for making soft rhythmic hissing sounds on a cymbal or snare drun especially in a dance band
2. : something resembling or suggesting a brush
 < a thick brush of wavy hair >
as
 a. : a heavily haired bushy tail (as that of a fox or squirrel or of certain dogs or cats)
  < the fox had a handsome red brush >
 b.
  (1) : an herb (Lepachys columnifera) of the western United States resembling a coneflower
  (2) : the young strobile or gynoecium of the hop
  (3) : a tuft of hairs (as on the tip of the wheat kernel)
  (4) : the inflorescence of the broomcorn
 c. : a feather tuft worn on a hat
  < a cock-green Tyrolean brush in my hat — Saul Bellow >
3.
 a. : an electrical conductor commonly in the form of a bundle of copper strips or wire gauze or a block of carbon serving as a means of connection by sliding contact between a stationary and a moving part of an electric circuit (as between line and armature of a generator or a motor)
 b. : brush discharge
4. [brush (IV) ]
 a. : an act or instance of brushing
  < he gave his old suit a quick brush >
 b. : a quick light touch : a fleeting momentary contact
  < she felt the brush of his coat as he hurried by >
 c.
  (1) : a light stroke with one foot, toe, or heel along the floor in any direction in dancing
  (2) : a low ballet kick in which the sole of the foot strikes the floor
 d. slang : a quiet and decisive rejection or dismissal : brush-off
IV. verb
(-ed/-ing/-es)
Etymology: Middle English brusshen, from brusshe, n.
transitive verb
1.
 a. : to apply a brush to or use a brush on
  < she was brushing her hair >
  < take the bread from the oven and brush the loaves with butter >
 b. : to apply with a brush
  < the paint must be brushed carefully onto the porous surface >
2.
 a. : to remove with a brush or by an act similar to brushing
  < brush the dust from your shoes >
  < he … brushed the ash from his cigarette — Nevil Shute >
 b. : to push or force especially in the course of physical motion
  < two men brushed their way through the crowd >
  < brush obstacles aside >
 c. : to dispose of in an offhand way : dismiss or reject summarily or perfunctorily — usually used with aside, away, or off
  < impatiently brushed aside the thought — Kathleen Freeman >
  < brushed our thanks away — Thomas Wood †1950 >
  < asked a polite question but was brushed off >
3.
 a. : to pass lightly over or across : touch gently against in passing
  < my left hand brushed the wall and found the doorknob — Hartley Howard >
 b. : affect, touch
  < the spirit of compromise which responsibility brings has not brushed him — Time >
4. : to beat (fibers) lightly to cause fraying or roughening rather than cutting in papermaking
5. dialect chiefly England : trim, clip
 < brushing the shrubbery >
intransitive verb
1. : to make the contact or motion or perform the action of brushing something
 < other stewards and messmen were scouring, scrubbing, brushing, mopping — Nation's Business >
2. of a horse : to interfere slightly so as to produce abrasion
V. adjective
Etymology: brush (III)
: resembling a brush especially in being bristly or cut relatively short and of even length
 < a brush haircut >
 < a brush mustache >
VI. verb
(-ed/-ing/-es)
Etymology: Middle English bruschen to rush, drive (influenced in meaning by 3& brush) (IV), from Middle French brosser to dash through underbrush, from broce, brosse, broisse underbrush
intransitive verb
: to move so lightly or deftly as to be scarcely perceptible : move so as to graze, skim over, or sweep something
 < brush past people quickly without hitting them carelessly with your umbrella — Agnes M. Miall >
transitive verb
: to force (a horse) to top speed over a short distance
VII. noun
(-es)
Etymology: Middle English brusche rush, hostile collision (influenced in meaning by 3& brush) (IV), from bruschen to rush, drive
1. : a brief or fleeting encounter; usually : one that involves an element of risk or contention
 < he had several brushes with the law >
 < a brush with enemy troops >
2. : a usually short often impromptu race
 < the horses came even and their riders decided to have a brush >
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更新时间:2024/11/14 16:09:44