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  1. Dictionary

    brake
    [brāk]
    noun
    brake (noun) · brakes (plural noun)
    1. a device for slowing or stopping a moving vehicle, typically by applying pressure to the wheels:
      "he slammed on his brakes" · "a brake pedal"
    verb
    brake (verb) · brakes (third person present) · braked (past tense) · braked (past participle) · braking (present participle)
    1. make a moving vehicle slow down or stop by using a brake:
      "drivers who brake abruptly"
      Opposite:
    Origin
    late 18th century: of unknown origin.
    brake
    [brāk]
    noun
    historical
    brake (noun) · brakes (plural noun)
    1. an open, horse-drawn, four-wheeled carriage.
    Origin
    mid 19th century: variant of break.
    brake
    [brāk]
    noun
    brake (noun) · brakes (plural noun) · brake harrow (noun) · brake harrows (plural noun)
    1. a toothed instrument used for crushing flax and hemp.
      • a heavy machine formerly used in agriculture for breaking up large lumps of earth.
    Origin
    late Middle English: possibly related to Middle Low German brake and Dutch braak, and perhaps also to break.
    brake
    [brāk]
    noun
    archaic
    literary
    brake (noun) · brakes (plural noun)
    1. a thicket. See also canebrake, fernbrake.
      "mist floats through the hawthorn brake"
    Origin
    Old English bracu (first recorded in the plural in fearnbraca ‘thickets of fern’), related to Middle Low German brake ‘branch, stump’.
    brake
    [brāk]
    noun
    brake (noun) · brakes (plural noun) · brake fern (noun) · brake ferns (plural noun)
    1. a coarse fern of warm and tropical countries, frequently having the fronds divided into long linear segments.
    Origin
    Middle English: perhaps an abbreviation of bracken (interpreted as plural).
    brake
    [brāk]
    verb
    archaic
    brake (verb)
    1. archaic past of break
    Translate brake to
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  2. People also ask
    a. ( often plural) a device for slowing or stopping a vehicle, wheel, shaft, etc, or for keeping it stationary, esp by means of friction. See also drum brake, disc brake, hydraulic brake, air brake, handbrake b. ( as modifier ): the brake pedal. 2. (Textiles) a machine or tool for crushing or breaking flax or hemp to separate the fibres 3.
    The good news is that NAPA AUTO PARTS carries a wide selection of auto brakes and brake parts online for you to reserve and pick-up in store. Find a local store near you if you are comfortable doing the work yourself and speak with one of our qualified associates.
    For brake constants, see table in section 5.3.10 Ws c/h Braking operations per hour h-1 317 5.3.5 Friction and starting frequency In addition to the brake torque, the friction per braking operation and the starting frequency are the characteristic values for selecting the brake.
  3. Eduicator Preferred Icon
    Educators' Preferred Source
    Based 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.

    Insight :Brake pads and rotors: brake fluid makes the calipers press the pads against the rotors

    Insight :Brake inspection: recommended at every oil change or twice a year

    Insight :Brake pad materials: affect brake performance and effectiveness

    Insight :Brake pad replacement: advised to replace regularly depending on driving factors

    Quiz :What is the primary function of a brake?

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  4. 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.