英:['bræmblɪ]
美:['bræmblɪ]
英:['bræmblɪ]
美:['bræmblɪ]
比较级:bramblier
最高级:brambliest
词根:bramble
n.bramble 荆棘;树莓;悬钩子属植物
Middle English brembel, from Old English brēmel; akin to Old English brōm broom
The first known use of bramble was before the 12th century
brandishverb
to shake or wave in a threatening manner
brandish a stick at a dog
to exhibit in a showy or aggressive manner
brandynoun
an alcoholic liquor made from wine or fruit juice
brandynoun
an alcoholic liquor made from wine or fruit juice
brand1 of 2noun
a burnt or burning piece of wood
a mark made by burning (as on cattle) to show ownership, maker, or quality
a printed mark made for similar purposes : trademark
a mark once put on criminals with a hot iron
a mark of disgrace : stigma
a class of goods identified as the product of a single maker
a particular kind : variety
brand2 of 2verb
to mark with or as if with a brand
to describe or identify with a word that expresses disapproval
was branded a coward
branch1 of 2noun
a natural division of a plant stem (as a bough growing from a trunk or twig from a bough)
something extending from a main line or source a railroad branch
river branch
a separate or subordinate division or part of a central system a branch of a bank
executive branch of the government
branch2 of 2verb
to send out branches : spread or separate into branches
a great elm branches over the yard
to spring out from a main body or line : diverge
streets branching off the highway
to extend activities
the business is branching out all over the state
branch1 of 2noun
a natural division of a plant stem (as a bough growing from a trunk or twig from a bough)
something extending from a main line or source a railroad branch
river branch
a separate or subordinate division or part of a central system a branch of a bank
executive branch of the government
branch2 of 2verb
to send out branches : spread or separate into branches
a great elm branches over the yard
to spring out from a main body or line : diverge
streets branching off the highway
to extend activities
the business is branching out all over the state
branch1 of 2noun
a natural division of a plant stem (as a bough growing from a trunk or twig from a bough)
something extending from a main line or source a railroad branch
river branch
a separate or subordinate division or part of a central system a branch of a bank
executive branch of the government
branch2 of 2verb
to send out branches : spread or separate into branches
a great elm branches over the yard
to spring out from a main body or line : diverge
streets branching off the highway
to extend activities
the business is branching out all over the state
branch1 of 2noun
a natural division of a plant stem (as a bough growing from a trunk or twig from a bough)
something extending from a main line or source a railroad branch
river branch
a separate or subordinate division or part of a central system a branch of a bank
executive branch of the government
branch2 of 2verb
to send out branches : spread or separate into branches
a great elm branches over the yard
to spring out from a main body or line : diverge
streets branching off the highway
to extend activities
the business is branching out all over the state
brannoun
the edible broken coat of the seed of a cereal grain left after the grain has been ground and the flour or meal sifted out
bramblenoun
any of a large genus of usually prickly shrubs (as a raspberry or blackberry) that are related to roses
1 From the initial lurch of the opening track, “A Day Off,” this album flutters around Mr. Threadgill’s preferred zone of tumbling funk, brambly counterpoint and deft, darting syncopation.
2 We must seek it among the leafless woods and the brambly lanes, on the heathy moors and the great still hills, if we want to feel its joyous breath and hear its silent voices.
3 He edged up the trunk, to his favorite place in the crook of two branches, and looked down at the Potter’s Field below him, a brambly patch of weeds and unmown grass in the moonlight.
4 Unintended moral: Even if you clean up nice, you'd probably rather be sipping bathtub gin in the brambly woods with your redneck cousins anyway.
5 Two days later, the police found three more — four skeletons in all, secured with burlap and positioned just a tenth of a mile away from one another, in the bramble off the side of a deserted stretch of seaside highway.
6 It had some herbal qualities, more anise and menthol than leafy and brambly, but it was by far the most mainstream of the wines, in the sense that the primary flavor was fruit.
7 A clay-bank filly came instantly to it, but with a sudden impulse he closed it abruptly, and set out on foot along a narrow, brambly path that wound down the mountain side.
8 Far away on either side stretched dim vistas of neglected park-land, deep with coarse grass and weeds and, where the trees stood thickest, all choked with a brambly undergrowth.
9 Follow the dark, brambly road nearly a half-mile until you hear the sound of live music.
10 Invasive, brambly shrubs, brought to the United States as ornamental plants, are much better at adapting to the warmer temperatures than native species and are quickly moving in to take their place.
11 I wrote thousands of pages there, but in order to see another adult human being I had to steal out through the brambly side of the house, along the driveway down to the street.
12 Their branches met overhead in a continuous tangle, their stems crept closer and closer, the brambly undergrowth thickened and multiplied.
13 Our first stop, a brambly field where a quartet of sheepdogs were herding a flock, their coats bearing bits of the underbrush.
14 Wines from this varietal are dark in color with blackcurrant aromas with hints of violets. Black fruit flavors combine with herbaceous brambly flavors.
此葡萄酿制而成的葡萄酒,色泽油黑,散发出黑加仑和紫罗兰的芳香;
15 Old Olifant's Swamp was a rough, brambly tract of second-growth woods, with a marshy pond and a stream through the middle.
16 Its color is medium purple with flavors of brown sugar, bramble, dark cherry, licorice, and sandalwood.
17 X. I murmur, under moon and stars In brambly wildernesses, I linger by my shingly bars, I loiter round my cresses.
18 There wasn’t a bit of vegetation in sight, beyond a few brambly thorn bushes, low and leafless in the sand.
19 At one point, his team stopped and walked so they could get a better look at some brambly overgrowth along one darkened street.
20 We looked down the hill, and there it was: four empty lanes plunging into blackness, flanked by gracefully decaying Haussmann slabs brambly with iron balconies.