- brunt
n. to bear, take the brunt (our battalion bore the brunt of the attack)
* * *[brʌnt]take the brunt (our battalion bore the bruntof the attack)to bear
Combinatory dictionary. 2013.
n. to bear, take the brunt (our battalion bore the brunt of the attack)
Combinatory dictionary. 2013.
Brunt — is a common surname:*Chris Brunt, West Bromwich Albion football player *Daryl Brunt, contestant on the third season of Canadian Idol *David Brunt, British meteorologist *Dominic Brunt, English actor *Hugh Brunt, British Composer, Conductor and… … Wikipedia
Brunt — (br[u^]nt), n. [OE. brunt, bront, fr. Icel. bruna to rush; cf. Icel. brenna to burn. Cf. {Burn}, v. t.] 1. The heat, or utmost violence, of an onset; the strength or greatest fury of any contention; as, the brunt of a battle. [1913 Webster] 2.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
brunt — [ brʌnt ] noun the brunt the worst part of something that has a bad effect: bear/take the brunt of something: The Education Department is expected to bear the brunt of these cuts in funding. The eastern area took the brunt of the storm. It was… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
Brunt — ist der Familienname folgender Personen: Chris Brunt (* 1984), nordirischer Fußballspieler Maureen Brunt (* 1982), US amerikanische Curlerin Peter Brunt (1917–2005), britischer Althistoriker Diese Seite ist eine … Deutsch Wikipedia
brunt — [brʌnt] n bear/take/suffer etc the brunt of sth to receive the worst part of an attack, criticism, bad situation etc ▪ an industry that bore the brunt of the recession ▪ The car took the full brunt of the explosion … Dictionary of contemporary English
brunt — [brunt] n. [ME bront < ? ON bruna, to rush] 1. the shock (of an attack) or impact (of a blow) 2. the heaviest or hardest part [to bear the brunt of the blame] … English World dictionary
brunt — /brunt/, n. the main force or impact, as of an attack or blow: His arm took the brunt of the blow. [1275 1325; ME; perh. orig. sexual assault; akin to ON brundr, G Brunft heat, ruttish state, OE brunetha heat, itching; c. OHG bronado. See BURN1]… … Universalium
brunt — index burden, pressure Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
brunt — (n.) early 14c., a sharp blow, of uncertain origin, perhaps from O.N. brundr sexual heat, or bruna to advance like wildfire. Meaning chief force is first attested 1570s … Etymology dictionary
brunt — [n] bad end of a situation burden, force, full force, impact, pressure, shock, strain, stress, tension, thrust, violence; concept 674 … New thesaurus
brunt — ► NOUN ▪ the chief impact of something bad. ORIGIN of unknown origin … English terms dictionary