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brake
1[breyk]
noun
a device for slowing or stopping a vehicle or other moving mechanism by the absorption or transfer of the energy of momentum, usually by means of friction.
brakes, the drums, shoes, tubes, levers, etc., making up such a device on a vehicle.
anything that has a slowing or stopping effect.
Also called brakeman. a member of a bobsled team who operates the brake.
Also called breaker. Textiles., a tool or machine for breaking up flax or hemp, to separate the fiber.
Also called press brake. a machine for bending sheet metal to a desired shape.
Obsolete., an old instrument of torture.
verb (used with object)
to slow or stop by means of or as if by means of a brake.
to furnish with brakes.
to process (flax or hemp) by crushing it in a brake.
verb (used without object)
to use or run a brake.
to stop or slow upon being braked.
to run a hoisting machine.
brake
2[breyk]
noun
a place overgrown with bushes, brambles, or cane.
brake
3[breyk]
noun
any of several large or coarse ferns, especially the bracken, Pteridium aquilinum.
brake
4[breyk]
verb
simple past tense of break.
brake
1/ breɪk /
noun
(often plural) a device for slowing or stopping a vehicle, wheel, shaft, etc, or for keeping it stationary, esp by means of friction See also drum brake disc brake hydraulic brake air brake handbrake
( as modifier )
the brake pedal
a machine or tool for crushing or breaking flax or hemp to separate the fibres
Also called: brake harrow. a heavy harrow for breaking up clods
short for brake van
short for shooting brake
Also spelt: break. an open four-wheeled horse-drawn carriage
an obsolete word for rack 1
verb
to slow down or cause to slow down, by or as if by using a brake
(tr) to crush or break up using a brake
brake
2/ breɪk /
noun
an area of dense undergrowth, shrubs, brushwood, etc; thicket
brake
3/ breɪk /
noun
another name for bracken See also rock brake
brake
4/ breɪk /
verb
archaic, a past tense of break
Other Word Forms
- brakeless adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of brake1
Origin of brake2
Word History and Origins
Origin of brake1
Origin of brake2
Example Sentences
The leader of the rail workers union Fectrans claimed that some workers had complained that problems with the tension of the cable that hauls the carriages had made braking difficult.
The second incident led to a scare because Leclerc passed a Sauber just after a red flag was thrown because of gravel on track, despite braking as hard as he could.
As part of my recovery, I have a “sober dating plan” intended to create boundaries and brakes around getting to know someone.
"It hit a building with brutal force and collapsed like a cardboard box," Teresa d'Avó told Portuguese television channel SIC, adding it seemed like it "had no brakes".
But the 2020 border clash put brakes on this momentum and it has taken seven long years for Modi to visit China again.
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