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Mr. S. had a large straw hat, and striped jacket and trousers, and his shirt fastened at the throat by a broach with Carry's hair, for he was always quite above wearing a neckcloth.
2012, Cara C. Putman, A Promise Born:
She pinned a broach on her jacket. When Viv saw it, she laughed. “Is that the best you can do? A flower broach?”
An awl; a bodkin; also, a wooden rod or pin, sharpened at each end, used by thatchers.
1840, “Cottages - Thatching”, in The Penny Magazine of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge:
It [the straw] is laid on to a considerable thickness and firmly secured by ropes or twisted straw, and pinned down by sharpened sticks called 'broaches'
I have tried on several occasions to broach the subject of my love to Lys; but she will not listen.
1964 December, “New Books”, in Modern Railways, page 429:
THE POCKET ENCYCLOPAEDIA OF BRITISH STEAM LOCOMOTIVES. By O. S. Nock. Blandford Press. 18s. Mr. Nock, he remarks in his preface, was "incredulous" when the idea of this book of 192 colour gravure illustrations of a representative collection of British steam locomotives from Locomotion to BR's Evening Star was broached to him.
The Politovskiy soared through the surface of the Atlantic like a broaching whale, coming three quarters of her length out of the water before crashing back.