bruit
See also: brúit
English
Etymology
From Old French bruit.
Pronunciation
- enPR: bro͞ot, IPA(key): /bɹuːt/
- Rhymes: -uːt
- Homophone: brute
Noun
bruit (countable and uncountable, plural bruits)
- (archaic) Rumour; talk; hearsay.
- 1590, William Shakespeare, Henry VI, Part III, Act IV, Scene 7
- Brother, we will proclaim you out of hand: / The bruit thereof will bring you many friends.
- 1607, William Shakespeare, The Life of Timon of Athens
- But yet I love my country, and am not / One that rejoices in the common wreck, / As common bruit doth put it.
- 1922, Michael Arlen, “Ep./1/1”, in “Piracy”: A Romantic Chronicle of These Days:
- And so it had always pleased M. Stutz to expect great things from the dark young man whom he had first seen in his early twenties ; and his expectations had waxed rather than waned on hearing the faint bruit of the love of Ivor and Virginia—for Virginia, M. Stutz thought, would bring fineness to a point in a man like Ivor Marlay, […]
- 1590, William Shakespeare, Henry VI, Part III, Act IV, Scene 7
- (medicine) An abnormal sound heard on auscultation. (French pronunciation)
- (obsolete) A noise.
- Thomas Hood, The Plea of the Midsummer Fairies
- […] When some fresh bruit
Startled me all aheap! — and soon I saw
The horridest shape that ever raised my awe.
- […] When some fresh bruit
- Thomas Hood, The Plea of the Midsummer Fairies
Translations
Verb
bruit (third-person singular simple present bruits, present participle bruiting, simple past and past participle bruited)
- (US, archaic British) To spread, promulgate or disseminate a rumour, news etc.
- 1567, Arthur Golding: Ovid's Metamorphoses; Bk. 2; lines 418
- And if it be to be believed, as bruited is by fame,
A day did pass without the Sun.
- And if it be to be believed, as bruited is by fame,
- 1590, Thomas Hariot, A Brief and True Report of the new found land of Virginia,
- There haue bin diuers and variable reportes with some slaunderous and shamefull speeches bruited abroade by many that returned from thence.
- c. 1600, William Shakespeare, Hamlet, Act I, Scene 2, lines 127–128,
- And the King's rouse the heaven shall bruit again,
- Re-speaking earthly thunder.
- 1997, Don DeLillo, Underworld,
- Paranoid. Now he knew what it meant, this word that was bandied and bruited so easily, and he sensed the connections being made around him.
- 1567, Arthur Golding: Ovid's Metamorphoses; Bk. 2; lines 418
French
Etymology
From Old French bruit, use as a noun of the past participle form of bruire (“to roar”), from a Proto-Romance alteration (by association with braire (“cry”)) of Latin rugitus (“roar”); cf. Vulgar Latin *brugitus < *brūgere. Compare Spanish ruido, Portuguese ruído. Cf. also rut.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /bʁɥi/
audio (file)
Further reading
- “bruit” in le Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
Old French
Etymology
From the past participle of bruire, or a Vulgar Latin *brūgitus < *brūgere, as an alteration of Latin rugitus < rugīre.
Noun
bruit m (oblique plural bruiz or bruitz, nominative singular bruiz or bruitz, nominative plural bruit)
Synonyms
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