bree

Meaning

Noun

Origin

  • From Middle English brewe, bre, bregh, from Old English brēġ ("eyelid") . Compare West Saxon brǣw, brēaw, brēaġ, from Proto-Germanic *brēwō. Cognate with Dutch wenkbrauw, German Braue. Compare brae from the same source. Apparently related to brow.
  • From Middle English bre, breie, apparently from Old English brīw, brīġ, from Proto-West Germanic *brīw ("porridge; mash"), whence also German Brei, Dutch brij. Alternatively, the word could be a cognate of German Brühe ("broth"), from Middle High German brüeje, from the verb brüejen, from Proto-Germanic *brōaną, whence modern German brühen, Dutch broeien, Middle Low German brȫjen. This is less likely, however, since the verb is not attested in English nor in Old Norse. Both paths eventually lead to the Proto-Indo-European root *bʰrewh₁-, whence also English broth and brew.

Modern English dictionary

Explore and search massive catalog of over 900,000 word meanings.

Word of the Day

Get a curated memorable word every day.

Challenge yourself

Level up your vocabulary by setting personal goals.

And much more

Try out Vedaist now.