brabble

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English

Etymology

From Middle Dutch brabbelen (to quarrel, jabber). Akin to babble. Compare modern Dutch brabbelen, German brabbeln (to talk confusedly).

Pronunciation

Verb

brabble (third-person singular simple present brabbles, present participle brabbling, simple past and past participle brabbled)

  1. (dated) To make clamorous noises; to act noisily.
    • 1598, John Stow, Survey of London, London: J.M. Dent, published 1912, page 362:
      Then next is the Clinke, a gaol or prison for the trespassers in those parts; namely, in old time, for such as should brabble, frey, or break the peace on the said bank, or in the brothel houses, they were by the inhabitants thereabout apprehended and committed to this gaol, where they were straitly imprisoned.
    • 1640, George Herbert, Jacula Prudentum; or, Outlandish Proverbs, Sentences, etc., in The Remains of that Sweet Singer of the Temple George Herbert, London: Pickering, 1841, p. 141,
      Brabbling curs never want sore ears.
    • 1883, Edward Maunde Thompson, Preface to Diary of Richard Cocks, cape-merchant in the English factory in Japan, 1615-1622, London: Hakluyt Society, p. xxxvi,
      And it was not only with the English that the Dutch sailors quarrelled. They were drunken and riotous and “brabbled” in the streets, till at last the long-suffering Japanese lost patience and seizing two of them summarily cut off their heads.
    • 1925, Stanley John Weyman, “XII In Society”, in Queen's Folly:
      "There, let's have no brabbling!" My lord struck in good-humouredly.
  2. To babble (of a stream or other watercourse).
    • 1902, Mary Johnston, chapter 9, in Audrey, New York: Grosset and Dunlap, page 121:
      Farther on, when they came to a miniature glen between the semblance of two hills, down which, in mockery of a torrent, brabbled a slim brown stream, MacLean stood still []
    • 1921, Reginald Farrer, chapter 10, in The Rainbow Bridge, London: E. Arnold & Co, page 181:
      Down in the middle, among mossy boulders, the beck brabbled through golden sheets of Draba []

Noun

brabble (plural brabbles)

  1. (dated) A brawl, or commotion.

Derived terms

References

Anagrams