See also: <span class="searchmatch">bram</span> and -<span class="searchmatch">bram</span> English Wikipedia has an article on: <span class="searchmatch">Bram</span> Wikipedia <span class="searchmatch">Bram</span> A male given name, short for Abraham A commune in Aude department, Occitania...
See also: <span class="searchmatch">Bram</span> Uncertain. Compare Sanskrit ब्रध्न (bradhnà, “reddish, yellow”), Proto-Slavic *bro(d)nъ (“colored”), perhaps pointing to Proto-Indo-European...
<span class="searchmatch">bràm</span> m (Uist) genitive plural of braim (“fart”) Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Scottish Gaelic. All possible mutated...
See also: <span class="searchmatch">bram</span> and <span class="searchmatch">Bram</span> -<span class="searchmatch">bram</span> accusative feminine singular of -bra...
IPA(key): (Central, Balearic, Valencia) [ˈ<span class="searchmatch">bɾams</span>] <span class="searchmatch">brams</span> plural of <span class="searchmatch">bram</span>...
med brask og <span class="searchmatch">bram</span> with great fanfare “med brask og <span class="searchmatch">bram</span>” in The Bokmål Dictionary. med brask og <span class="searchmatch">bram</span> with great fanfare “med brask og <span class="searchmatch">bram</span>” in The Nynorsk...
Compare German Bremse. <span class="searchmatch">Brams</span> (Erzgebirgisch) horsefly, breezefly, gadfly (fly of the family Tabanidae) Compare German Bremse. <span class="searchmatch">Brams</span> (Erzgebirgisch) brake...
See also: braam From Middle Low German <span class="searchmatch">brâm</span>, from Old Saxon *<span class="searchmatch">brām</span>, from Proto-West Germanic *<span class="searchmatch">brām</span>. Braam m (plural Bramen) (botany) broom (shrub)...
'brơ̆m From Chamic. Compare Rade <span class="searchmatch">ƀrăm</span>. IPA(key): /<span class="searchmatch">ɓrəm</span>/ ʼbrơ̆m arrow...