Bray
Pronunciation
- enPR: breɪ, IPA: /bɹeɪ/
- Rhymes: -eɪ
Origin 1
From Middle French braire, from Vulgar Latin bragire, from Gaulish *bragu (compare Middle Irish braigid ("it crashes, explodes"), Breton breugiñ ("to bray"); akin to English break, Latin fragor ("crash"), frangere ("to break")).
Full definition of bray
Verb
- (intransitive) Of a donkey, to make its cry.Whenever I walked by, that donkey brayed at me.
- (intransitive) Of a camel, to make its cry.
- (intransitive) To make a harsh, discordant sound like a donkey's bray.He threw back his head and brayed with laughter.
- (transitive) To make or utter with a loud, discordant, or harsh and grating sound.
- MiltonArms on armour clashing, brayed
Horrible discord. - Sir Walter ScottAnd varying notes the war pipes brayed.
- GrayHeard ye the din of battle bray?
Noun
bray
(plural brays)Synonyms
Origin 2
From Old French breier (Modern French broyer).
Verb
- (now rare) To crush or pound, especially with a mortar.
- Bible, Proverbs xxvii. 22Though thou shouldest bray a fool in a mortar, ... yet will not his foolishness depart from him.
- 1624, John Smith, Generall Historie, in Kupperman 1988, p. 141:Their heads and shoulders are painted red with the roote Pocone brayed to powder, mixed with oyle ....
- (British, chiefly Yorkshire) By extension, to hit someone or something.
- 2011, Sarah Hall (writer), Butchers Perfume from The Beautiful Indifference, Faber and Faber (2011), page 25:If anything he brayed him all the harder - the old family bull recognising his fighting days were close to over.