brass
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Middle English bras, bres, from Old English bræs (“brass, bronze”), of uncertain origin. Perhaps representing a backformation from Proto-Germanic *brasnaz (“brazen”), from or related to *brasō (“fire, pyre”). Compare Old Norse and Icelandic bras (“solder”), Icelandic brasa (“to harden in the fire”), Swedish brasa (“a small controlled fire”), Danish brase (“to fry”); French braser ("to solder"; > English braise) from the same Germanic root. Compare also Middle Dutch braspenninc ("a silver coin", literally, "silver-penny"; > Dutch braspenning), Old Frisian bress (“copper”), Middle Low German bras (“metal, ore”).
In the military sense an ellipsis of the brass hats.
brass (usually uncountable, plural brasses)
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brass (comparative more brass, superlative most brass)
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brass (third-person singular simple present brasses, present participle brassing, simple past and past participle brassed)
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By ellipsis from brass nail, in turn from "nail[ing]" (fig.) and "brass blonde" (see "brazen"); and also shortened from Cockney Rhyming slang brass flute for "prostitute".
brass (usually uncountable, plural brasses)
brass
From Portuguese braça and Spanish braza, from Old Galician-Portuguese and Old Spanish braça, from Latin brachia, variant of bracchium (“arm, cubit”), from Ancient Greek βραχίων (brakhíōn, “upper arm”).
brass (plural brasses)
brass n (genitive singular brass, no plural)
brass
brass n
nominative | genitive | ||
---|---|---|---|
singular | indefinite | brass | brass |
definite | brasset | brassets | |
plural | indefinite | — | — |
definite | — | — |
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