/bɹeɪk/
OriginOrigin uncertain; possibly from Middle Dutch or Middle Low German brake (“nose ring, curb, flax brake”), which according to Watkins is related to sense 4 and from Proto-Germanic *brekaną (“to break”).
- A device used to slow or stop the motion of a wheel, or of a vehicle, usually by friction (although other resistive forces, such as electromagnetic fields or aerodynamic drag, can also be used); also, the controls or apparatus used to engage such a mechanism such as the pedal in a car.
“She slammed the brakes when she saw a child run in front of the car.”
“You’re pressing the brakes too hard—try just squeezing them.”
“Auxiliaries and ancillaries are comprehensive, and include a Westinghouse motor-driven recriprocating compressor used for locomotive braking and general service air, two rotary exhauster sets for trai”
- The act of braking, of using a brake to slow down a machine or vehicle
“Give the car a quick brake.”
- An apparatus for testing the power of a steam engine or other motor by weighing the amount of friction that the motor will overcome; a friction brake.
- figurativelySomething used to retard or stop some action, process etc.
- An ancient engine of war analogous to the crossbow and ballista.
- obsoleteThe winch of a crossbow.
- The handle of a pump.
- A baker’s kneading trough.
“You shall kneade[…]first with handes‥lastly with the brake.”
- A frame for confining a refractory horse while the smith is shoeing it.
- An enclosure to restrain cattle, horses, etc.
“He was shooting, and the field where the [cock-fighting] ring was verged on the shooting-brake where the rabbits were.”
- A cart or carriage without a body, used in breaking in horses.ᵂ
- A carriage for transporting shooting parties and their equipment.ᵂ
“It had been arranged as part of the day’s programme that Mr. Cooke was to drive those who wished to go over the Rise in his new brake.”
“A few moments later they heard the sound of an engine, and a muddy shooting brake appeared on the road behind them.”
- That part of a carriage, as of a movable battery, or engine, which enables it to turn.
- countable, uncountableAny fern in the genus Pteris.
- countable, uncountableBracken (Pteridium spp.).
- A thicket, or an area overgrown with briers etc.
“Rounds rising hillocks, brakes obscure and rough, / To shelter thee from tempest and from rain.”
“He stayed not for brake, and he stopped not for stone.”
“He halts, and searches with his eyes
Among the scatter’d rocks:
And now at distance can discern
A stirring in a brake of fern […]”
- A type of machine for bending sheet metal. (See wikipedia.)
- A large, heavy harrow for breaking clods of earth after ploughing; a drag.
- A tool used for breaking flax or hemp.
- obsoleteA cage.
- historicalA type of torture instrument.
“Methods of applying pain were many and ingenious, in particular the ways of twisting, stretching and manipulating the body out of shape, normally falling under the catch-all term of the rack, or the b”
- intransitiveTo operate a brake or brakes.
“Auxiliaries and ancillaries are comprehensive, and include a Westinghouse motor-driven recriprocating compressor used for locomotive braking and general service air, two rotary exhauster sets for trai”
- intransitiveTo be stopped or slowed (as if) by braking.
- transitiveTo bruise and crush; to knead.
“The farmer’s son brakes the flax while mother brakes the bread dough”
- transitiveTo pulverise with a harrow.
- archaic, form-of, pastsimple past of break
“And all the people brake off the golden earrings […]”
Formsbrakes(plural) · break(alternative, rare) · brakes(present, singular, third-person) · braking(participle, present) · braked(participle, past) · braked(past) · Brakes(plural)