Lexicographical Neighbors of Brashed
Literary usage of Brashed
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Letters and Memorials of Jane Welsh Carlyle by Jane Welsh Carlyle (1883)
"Nothing could be kinder than Mrs. Newton was, but kindness could do nothing till
the time came. Next day I got up to breakfast, but too brashed to dream of ..."
2. Transactions of the Philological Society by Philological Society (Great Britain). (1867)
"Ed.] Brash, vi to run headlong at, to do anything hastily or rashly ; as, " I
brashed at it "=I attacked it with a rush. Comp. ..."
3. Macmillan's Magazine by David Masson, George Grove, John Morley, Mowbray Morris (1893)
"And when I got home I roused up the forge-fire, so as to make sure where I was,
and comfort my knuckles; and then I brashed it down, with coals at present ..."
4. The Nineteenth Century (1892)
"Bismarck went directly, starting dusty and dirty in undress, with huge boots un-
brashed. He met the Emperor near Frenois, a mile and three- quarters from ..."
5. New Letters and Memorials of Jane Welsh Carlyle: Annotated by Thomas Carlyle by Jane Welsh Carlyle, Thomas Carlyle (1903)
"Myself is brashed to-day, not with the marmalade so much as with the cold thro'
the night, which kept me awake coughing. To-night I will decidedly realize ..."