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- nounbrake (noun) · brakes (plural noun)verbbrake (verb) · brakes (third person present) · braked (past tense) · braked (past participle) · braking (present participle)Originlate 18th century: of unknown origin.nounbrake (noun) · brakes (plural noun) · brake harrow (noun) · brake harrows (plural noun)
- a toothed instrument used for crushing flax and hemp.
- a heavy machine formerly used in agriculture for breaking up large lumps of earth.
Originlate Middle English: possibly related to Middle Low German brake and Dutch braak, and perhaps also to break.nounbrake (noun) · brakes (plural noun) · brake fern (noun) · brake ferns (plural noun)- a coarse fern of warm and tropical countries, frequently having the fronds divided into long linear segments.
- archaic term for bracken
OriginMiddle English: perhaps an abbreviation of bracken (interpreted as plural). - People also ask
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- BrakeData fromBritannicaEducators' Preferred SourceBased on a survey of educators' ranking of sources.Brake, device for decreasing the speed of a body or for stopping its motion. Most brakes act on rotating mechanical elements and absorb kinetic energy either mechanically, hydrodynamically, or electrically.
Quiz :What is the primary function of a brake?
Score :0Your score : WebLearn the meaning, pronunciation and usage of the word brake as a device for slowing or stopping a vehicle or a thing that stops something. See pictures, collocations and idioms related to brake.