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BRAKE

  • Breakfield
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Breakfield

    English : variant spelling of Brakefield.

  • Brakenbury
  • Boy/Male

    Shakespearean

    Brakenbury

    King Henry IV, Part 2' Robert Shallow, a country justice. 'King John' Robert Faulconbridge, and...

  • Lockwood
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Lockwood

    English : habitational name from a place in West Yorkshire, probably named in Old English as ‘enclosed wood’, from loc(a) ‘enclosure’ (see Lock) + wudu ‘wood’. It seems likely that all present-day bearers of the name descend from a single family which originated in this place. There is another place of the same name in Cleveland, first recorded in 1273 as Locwyt, from Old English loc(a) + Old Norse viðr ‘wood’, ‘brake’, but it is not clear whether it has given rise to a surname.

  • Brackenbury
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Brackenbury

    English : habitational name from any of several minor places named with Middle English braken ‘bracken’ (from Old English bræcen or Old Norse brakni) + Old Norse berg ‘hill’, among them Brackenber in West Yorkshire and Cumbria, Brackenborough in Lincolnshire, and Breckenbrough in North Yorkshire.

  • Brake
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Brake

    English : topographic name for someone who lived by a clump of bushes or by a patch of bracken. Brake ‘thicket’ and brake ‘bracken’ were homonyms in Middle English. The first is from Old English bracu; the second is by folk etymology from northern Middle English braken, -en being taken as a plural ending. After the words had fallen together, their senses also became confused.North German : habitational name from any of several places so named, notably the town on the Weser, or a topographic name from Middle Low German brāk ‘clearing’, ‘coppice’.Wilhelm Joseph Dietrich, Baron von Brake, of Hannover (Germany), is said to have settled in Nansemond, VA, about 1730. His son Johann Jacob (John) Brake was the progenitor of the VA and WV Brakes; another son, also named Jacob Brake, settled in Edgecombe Co., NC, in 1742, where he sired seven sons and two daughters.

  • Bracken
  • Surname or Lastname

    Irish

    Bracken

    Irish : Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Breacáin ‘descendant of Breacán’, a personal name from a diminutive of breac ‘speckled’, ‘spotted’, which was borne by a 6th-century saint who lived at Ballyconnel, County Cavan, and was famous as a healer; St. Bricin’s Military Hospital, Dublin is named in his honor.English : topographic name from Middle English braken ‘bracken’ (from Old English bræcen or Old Norse brakni), or a habitational name from a place named with this word, such as Bracken in East Yorkshire or Bracon Ash in Norfolk.German : especially in the north, probably a topographic name from Middle Low German brake ‘brushwood’, ‘fallow land’, ‘copse’, an element of many field and place names.

  • Brakefield
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Brakefield

    English : topographic name from Middle English brake ‘thicket’, ‘bracken’ (see Brake) + feld ‘open country’, ‘cleared land’.

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BRAKE

  • Breakman
  • n.

    See Brakeman.

  • Brake
  • v. t.

    An ancient instrument of torture.

  • Cataract
  • n.

    A kind of hydraulic brake for regulating the action of pumping engines and other machines; -- sometimes called dashpot.

  • Brake
  • v. t.

    A cart or carriage without a body, used in breaking in horses.

  • Handwheel
  • n.

    Any wheel worked by hand; esp., one the rim of which serves as the handle by which a valve, car brake, or other part is adjusted.

  • Break
  • v. t.

    A device for checking motion, or for measuring friction. See Brake, n. 9 & 10.

  • Gripe
  • n.

    A device for grasping or holding anything; a brake to stop a wheel.

  • Shoe
  • n.

    The part of a railroad car brake which presses upon the wheel to retard its motion.

  • Slipper
  • n.

    A kind of brake or shoe for a wagon wheel.

  • Caboose
  • n.

    A car used on freight or construction trains for brakemen, workmen, etc.; a tool car.

  • Involucre
  • n.

    A continuous marginal covering of sporangia, in certain ferns, as in the common brake, or the cup-shaped processes of the filmy ferns.

  • Brake
  • v. t.

    An apparatus for testing the power of a steam engine, or other motor, by weighing the amount of friction that the motor will overcome; a friction brake.

  • Brake
  • v. t.

    A large, heavy harrow for breaking clods after plowing; a drag.

  • Brakeman
  • n.

    The man in charge of the winding (or hoisting) engine for a mine.

  • Braky
  • a.

    Full of brakes; abounding with brambles, shrubs, or ferns; rough; thorny.

  • Brakeman
  • n.

    A man in charge of a brake or brakes.

  • Brakemen
  • pl.

    of Brakeman

  • Brake
  • v. t.

    A piece of mechanism for retarding or stopping motion by friction, as of a carriage or railway car, by the pressure of rubbers against the wheels, or of clogs or ratchets against the track or roadway, or of a pivoted lever against a wheel or drum in a machine.