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brusque/English/verb

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brusque (English verb) brusque/English/verb: invalid uppercase tag Received-Pronunciation not in or uppercase_tags: {"categories": ["English adjectives", "English entries with incorrect language header", "English lemmas", "English terms borrowed from French", "English terms derived from French", "English terms derived from Italian", "English terms with unknown etymologies", "English verbs", "Entries with translation boxes", "Pages with 2 entries", "Pages with entries", "Rhymes:English/ʌsk", "Rhymes:English/ʌsk/1 syllable", "Terms with Albanian translations", "Terms with Armenian translations", "Terms with Bulgarian translations", "Terms with Catalan translations", "Terms with Cebuano translations", "Terms with Czech translations", "Terms with Danish translations", "Terms with Dutch translations", "Terms with Esperanto translations", "Terms with Faroese translations", "Terms with Finnish translations", "Terms with French translations", "Terms with Georgian translations", "Terms with German translations", "Terms with Greek translations", "Terms with Hungarian translations", "Terms with Icelandic translations", "Terms with Indonesian translations", "Terms with Irish translations", "Terms with Italian translations", "Terms with Japanese translations", "Terms with Korean translations", "Terms with Latin translations", "Terms with Macedonian translations", "Terms with Mandarin translations", "Terms with Occitan translations", "Terms with Polish translations", "Terms with Portuguese translations", "Terms with Russian translations", "Terms with Scots translations", "Terms with Spanish translations", "Terms with Swedish translations", "Terms with Ukrainian translations", "Terms with Veps translations", "en:Personality", "fr:Personality"], "etymology_templates": [{"args": {"1": "adjective"}, "expansion": "adjective", "name": "glossary"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "fr", "3": "brusque"}, "expansion": "French brusque", "name": "bor"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "it", "3": "brusco", "t": "abrupt, sudden, brusque; brisk; eager; sour, tart; unripe; grim-looking"}, "expansion": "Italian brusco (“abrupt, sudden, brusque; brisk; eager; sour, tart; unripe; grim-looking”)", "name": "der"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "etymology unknown"}, "expansion": "etymology unknown", "name": "unknown"}, {"args": {"1": "verb"}, "expansion": "verb", "name": "glossary"}], "etymology_text": "The adjective is borrowed from French brusque, from Italian brusco (“abrupt, sudden, brusque; brisk; eager; sour, tart; unripe; grim-looking”); further etymology unknown.\nThe verb is derived from the adjective.", "forms": [{"form": "brusques", "tags": ["present", "singular", "third-person"]}, {"form": "brusquing", "tags": ["participle", "present"]}, {"form": "brusqued", "tags": ["participle", "past"]}, {"form": "brusqued", "tags": ["past"]}], "head_templates": [{"args": {}, "expansion": "brusque (third-person singular simple present brusques, present participle brusquing, simple past and past participle brusqued)", "name": "en-verb"}], "lang": "English", "lang_code": "en", "pos": "verb", "senses": [{"categories": ["English terms with archaic senses", "English terms with quotations", "English transitive verbs"], "examples": [{"ref": "1740, A[dam] Williamson, “The Disposition of an Army. [General Battles.]”, in Military Memoirs and Maxims of Marshal Turenne. […], Dublin: […] George Faulkner, […], →OCLC, footnote †, page 36:", "text": "Had this been done, Denine had not been bruſqued and carried by Villars at the firſt aſſault, […]", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1781 August 24, Benjamin Franklin, “[Benjamin] Franklin to [William] Carmichael”, in Francis Wharton, editor, The Revolutionary Diplomatic Correspondence of the United States. […] (50th Congress, 1st Session, House of Representatives Mis. Doc.; 603, part 4), volume IV, Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, published 1889, →OCLC, page 660:", "text": "He was indefatigable while he stayed and took true pains, but he brusqued the ministers too much, and I found after he was gone that he had thereby given more offense than I could have imagined.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1803 March 4, William Wilberforce, “W. Wilberforce, Esq. to Thomas Babington, Esq.”, in Robert Isaac Wilberforce, Samuel Wilberforce, editors, The Correspondence of William Wilberforce. […], volume I, London: John Murray, […], published 1840, →OCLC, page 263:", "text": "Not that I suspect you of thus brusquing matters. It is rather my own fault where, which is too often the case, I am not too negligent about the spiritual concerns of my friends.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1826, [Walter Scott], chapter VIII, in Woodstock; Or, The Cavalier. […], volume I, Edinburgh: […] [James Ballantyne and Co.] for Archibald Constable and Co.; London: Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green, →OCLC, page 201:", "text": "I'll e'en brusque it a little, if he goes on at this rate, and try if I can bring him to a more intelligible mode of speaking.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1839 October, [Egerton Brydges], “Some Recollections of James Hogg. […] No. I.”, in Fraser’s Magazine for Town and Country, volume XX, number CXVIII, London: James Fraser […], →OCLC, page 427, column 1:", "text": "[H]e [Thomas Pringle] was poor, and from the outset [William] Blackwood domineered over and brusqued him. [James] Cleghorn was also poor, but of a sturdy disposition, and he brusqued every body.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1901, Baroness Orczy [i.e., Emma Orczy], “The Ultimatum”, in The Tangled Skein, London: Greening & Co., published 1907, →OCLC, part II (The Lady Ursula), page 117:", "text": "He blamed himself very severely for his attempt at brusquing Fate.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1939 August, George [Edward Gordon] Catlin, “Moralism”, in Anglo-Saxony and Its Tradition, New York, N.Y.: The Macmillan Company, →OCLC, § v, page 272:", "text": "The scholar may object that Professor Macmurray is a 'judaizer' who not only brusques the authority of the Church.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2003, [Nikki Gemmell], “Lesson 5: It is Absolutely Necessary to Wash the Armpits and Hips Every Day”, in The Bride Stripped Bare, London, New York, N.Y.: Fourth Estate, HarperCollins, →ISBN, part I, pages 10–11:", "text": "Sometimes in bed Cole doesn't allow your hand to stay on his chest, he brusques it away. Sometimes he lets your hand rest there.", "type": "quote"}], "glosses": ["To act towards (someone or something) in a curt or rudely abrupt manner."], "links": [["act", "act#Verb"], ["towards", "towards"], ["curt", "curt#Adjective"], ["rudely", "rudely"], ["abrupt", "abrupt#Adjective"], ["manner", "manner#Noun"]], "raw_glosses": ["(transitive, chiefly archaic) To act towards (someone or something) in a curt or rudely abrupt manner."], "tags": ["archaic", "transitive"]}], "sounds": [{"ipa": "/bɹʊsk/", "tags": ["Received-Pronunciation"]}, {"ipa": "/bɹuːsk/", "tags": ["Received-Pronunciation"]}, {"ipa": "/bɹʌsk/", "tags": ["Received-Pronunciation"]}, {"ipa": "/bɹʌsk/", "tags": ["General-American"]}, {"audio": "En-us-brusque.ogg", "mp3_url": "https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/transcoded/2/26/En-us-brusque.ogg/En-us-brusque.ogg.mp3", "ogg_url": "https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/26/En-us-brusque.ogg"}, {"rhymes": "-ʌsk"}], "translations": [{"code": "ko", "lang": "Korean", "roman": "muttukttukhada", "sense": "to act towards (someone or something) in a curt or rudely abrupt manner", "word": "무뚝뚝하다"}, {"code": "ko", "lang": "Korean", "roman": "tungmyeongseureopda", "sense": "to act towards (someone or something) in a curt or rudely abrupt manner", "word": "퉁명스럽다"}], "word": "brusque"}

brusque (English verb) brusque/English/verb: invalid uppercase tag Received-Pronunciation not in or uppercase_tags: {"categories": ["English adjectives", "English entries with incorrect language header", "English lemmas", "English terms borrowed from French", "English terms derived from French", "English terms derived from Italian", "English terms with unknown etymologies", "English verbs", "Entries with translation boxes", "Pages with 2 entries", "Pages with entries", "Rhymes:English/ʌsk", "Rhymes:English/ʌsk/1 syllable", "Terms with Albanian translations", "Terms with Armenian translations", "Terms with Bulgarian translations", "Terms with Catalan translations", "Terms with Cebuano translations", "Terms with Czech translations", "Terms with Danish translations", "Terms with Dutch translations", "Terms with Esperanto translations", "Terms with Faroese translations", "Terms with Finnish translations", "Terms with French translations", "Terms with Georgian translations", "Terms with German translations", "Terms with Greek translations", "Terms with Hungarian translations", "Terms with Icelandic translations", "Terms with Indonesian translations", "Terms with Irish translations", "Terms with Italian translations", "Terms with Japanese translations", "Terms with Korean translations", "Terms with Latin translations", "Terms with Macedonian translations", "Terms with Mandarin translations", "Terms with Occitan translations", "Terms with Polish translations", "Terms with Portuguese translations", "Terms with Russian translations", "Terms with Scots translations", "Terms with Spanish translations", "Terms with Swedish translations", "Terms with Ukrainian translations", "Terms with Veps translations", "en:Personality", "fr:Personality"], "etymology_templates": [{"args": {"1": "adjective"}, "expansion": "adjective", "name": "glossary"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "fr", "3": "brusque"}, "expansion": "French brusque", "name": "bor"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "it", "3": "brusco", "t": "abrupt, sudden, brusque; brisk; eager; sour, tart; unripe; grim-looking"}, "expansion": "Italian brusco (“abrupt, sudden, brusque; brisk; eager; sour, tart; unripe; grim-looking”)", "name": "der"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "etymology unknown"}, "expansion": "etymology unknown", "name": "unknown"}, {"args": {"1": "verb"}, "expansion": "verb", "name": "glossary"}], "etymology_text": "The adjective is borrowed from French brusque, from Italian brusco (“abrupt, sudden, brusque; brisk; eager; sour, tart; unripe; grim-looking”); further etymology unknown.\nThe verb is derived from the adjective.", "forms": [{"form": "brusques", "tags": ["present", "singular", "third-person"]}, {"form": "brusquing", "tags": ["participle", "present"]}, {"form": "brusqued", "tags": ["participle", "past"]}, {"form": "brusqued", "tags": ["past"]}], "head_templates": [{"args": {}, "expansion": "brusque (third-person singular simple present brusques, present participle brusquing, simple past and past participle brusqued)", "name": "en-verb"}], "lang": "English", "lang_code": "en", "pos": "verb", "senses": [{"categories": ["English terms with archaic senses", "English terms with quotations", "English transitive verbs"], "examples": [{"ref": "1740, A[dam] Williamson, “The Disposition of an Army. [General Battles.]”, in Military Memoirs and Maxims of Marshal Turenne. […], Dublin: […] George Faulkner, […], →OCLC, footnote †, page 36:", "text": "Had this been done, Denine had not been bruſqued and carried by Villars at the firſt aſſault, […]", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1781 August 24, Benjamin Franklin, “[Benjamin] Franklin to [William] Carmichael”, in Francis Wharton, editor, The Revolutionary Diplomatic Correspondence of the United States. […] (50th Congress, 1st Session, House of Representatives Mis. Doc.; 603, part 4), volume IV, Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, published 1889, →OCLC, page 660:", "text": "He was indefatigable while he stayed and took true pains, but he brusqued the ministers too much, and I found after he was gone that he had thereby given more offense than I could have imagined.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1803 March 4, William Wilberforce, “W. Wilberforce, Esq. to Thomas Babington, Esq.”, in Robert Isaac Wilberforce, Samuel Wilberforce, editors, The Correspondence of William Wilberforce. […], volume I, London: John Murray, […], published 1840, →OCLC, page 263:", "text": "Not that I suspect you of thus brusquing matters. It is rather my own fault where, which is too often the case, I am not too negligent about the spiritual concerns of my friends.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1826, [Walter Scott], chapter VIII, in Woodstock; Or, The Cavalier. […], volume I, Edinburgh: […] [James Ballantyne and Co.] for Archibald Constable and Co.; London: Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green, →OCLC, page 201:", "text": "I'll e'en brusque it a little, if he goes on at this rate, and try if I can bring him to a more intelligible mode of speaking.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1839 October, [Egerton Brydges], “Some Recollections of James Hogg. […] No. I.”, in Fraser’s Magazine for Town and Country, volume XX, number CXVIII, London: James Fraser […], →OCLC, page 427, column 1:", "text": "[H]e [Thomas Pringle] was poor, and from the outset [William] Blackwood domineered over and brusqued him. [James] Cleghorn was also poor, but of a sturdy disposition, and he brusqued every body.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1901, Baroness Orczy [i.e., Emma Orczy], “The Ultimatum”, in The Tangled Skein, London: Greening & Co., published 1907, →OCLC, part II (The Lady Ursula), page 117:", "text": "He blamed himself very severely for his attempt at brusquing Fate.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1939 August, George [Edward Gordon] Catlin, “Moralism”, in Anglo-Saxony and Its Tradition, New York, N.Y.: The Macmillan Company, →OCLC, § v, page 272:", "text": "The scholar may object that Professor Macmurray is a 'judaizer' who not only brusques the authority of the Church.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2003, [Nikki Gemmell], “Lesson 5: It is Absolutely Necessary to Wash the Armpits and Hips Every Day”, in The Bride Stripped Bare, London, New York, N.Y.: Fourth Estate, HarperCollins, →ISBN, part I, pages 10–11:", "text": "Sometimes in bed Cole doesn't allow your hand to stay on his chest, he brusques it away. Sometimes he lets your hand rest there.", "type": "quote"}], "glosses": ["To act towards (someone or something) in a curt or rudely abrupt manner."], "links": [["act", "act#Verb"], ["towards", "towards"], ["curt", "curt#Adjective"], ["rudely", "rudely"], ["abrupt", "abrupt#Adjective"], ["manner", "manner#Noun"]], "raw_glosses": ["(transitive, chiefly archaic) To act towards (someone or something) in a curt or rudely abrupt manner."], "tags": ["archaic", "transitive"]}], "sounds": [{"ipa": "/bɹʊsk/", "tags": ["Received-Pronunciation"]}, {"ipa": "/bɹuːsk/", "tags": ["Received-Pronunciation"]}, {"ipa": "/bɹʌsk/", "tags": ["Received-Pronunciation"]}, {"ipa": "/bɹʌsk/", "tags": ["General-American"]}, {"audio": "En-us-brusque.ogg", "mp3_url": "https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/transcoded/2/26/En-us-brusque.ogg/En-us-brusque.ogg.mp3", "ogg_url": "https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/26/En-us-brusque.ogg"}, {"rhymes": "-ʌsk"}], "translations": [{"code": "ko", "lang": "Korean", "roman": "muttukttukhada", "sense": "to act towards (someone or something) in a curt or rudely abrupt manner", "word": "무뚝뚝하다"}, {"code": "ko", "lang": "Korean", "roman": "tungmyeongseureopda", "sense": "to act towards (someone or something) in a curt or rudely abrupt manner", "word": "퉁명스럽다"}], "word": "brusque"}

brusque (English verb) brusque/English/verb: invalid uppercase tag Received-Pronunciation not in or uppercase_tags: {"categories": ["English adjectives", "English entries with incorrect language header", "English lemmas", "English terms borrowed from French", "English terms derived from French", "English terms derived from Italian", "English terms with unknown etymologies", "English verbs", "Entries with translation boxes", "Pages with 2 entries", "Pages with entries", "Rhymes:English/ʌsk", "Rhymes:English/ʌsk/1 syllable", "Terms with Albanian translations", "Terms with Armenian translations", "Terms with Bulgarian translations", "Terms with Catalan translations", "Terms with Cebuano translations", "Terms with Czech translations", "Terms with Danish translations", "Terms with Dutch translations", "Terms with Esperanto translations", "Terms with Faroese translations", "Terms with Finnish translations", "Terms with French translations", "Terms with Georgian translations", "Terms with German translations", "Terms with Greek translations", "Terms with Hungarian translations", "Terms with Icelandic translations", "Terms with Indonesian translations", "Terms with Irish translations", "Terms with Italian translations", "Terms with Japanese translations", "Terms with Korean translations", "Terms with Latin translations", "Terms with Macedonian translations", "Terms with Mandarin translations", "Terms with Occitan translations", "Terms with Polish translations", "Terms with Portuguese translations", "Terms with Russian translations", "Terms with Scots translations", "Terms with Spanish translations", "Terms with Swedish translations", "Terms with Ukrainian translations", "Terms with Veps translations", "en:Personality", "fr:Personality"], "etymology_templates": [{"args": {"1": "adjective"}, "expansion": "adjective", "name": "glossary"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "fr", "3": "brusque"}, "expansion": "French brusque", "name": "bor"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "it", "3": "brusco", "t": "abrupt, sudden, brusque; brisk; eager; sour, tart; unripe; grim-looking"}, "expansion": "Italian brusco (“abrupt, sudden, brusque; brisk; eager; sour, tart; unripe; grim-looking”)", "name": "der"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "etymology unknown"}, "expansion": "etymology unknown", "name": "unknown"}, {"args": {"1": "verb"}, "expansion": "verb", "name": "glossary"}], "etymology_text": "The adjective is borrowed from French brusque, from Italian brusco (“abrupt, sudden, brusque; brisk; eager; sour, tart; unripe; grim-looking”); further etymology unknown.\nThe verb is derived from the adjective.", "forms": [{"form": "brusques", "tags": ["present", "singular", "third-person"]}, {"form": "brusquing", "tags": ["participle", "present"]}, {"form": "brusqued", "tags": ["participle", "past"]}, {"form": "brusqued", "tags": ["past"]}], "head_templates": [{"args": {}, "expansion": "brusque (third-person singular simple present brusques, present participle brusquing, simple past and past participle brusqued)", "name": "en-verb"}], "lang": "English", "lang_code": "en", "pos": "verb", "senses": [{"categories": ["English terms with archaic senses", "English terms with quotations", "English transitive verbs"], "examples": [{"ref": "1740, A[dam] Williamson, “The Disposition of an Army. [General Battles.]”, in Military Memoirs and Maxims of Marshal Turenne. […], Dublin: […] George Faulkner, […], →OCLC, footnote †, page 36:", "text": "Had this been done, Denine had not been bruſqued and carried by Villars at the firſt aſſault, […]", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1781 August 24, Benjamin Franklin, “[Benjamin] Franklin to [William] Carmichael”, in Francis Wharton, editor, The Revolutionary Diplomatic Correspondence of the United States. […] (50th Congress, 1st Session, House of Representatives Mis. Doc.; 603, part 4), volume IV, Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, published 1889, →OCLC, page 660:", "text": "He was indefatigable while he stayed and took true pains, but he brusqued the ministers too much, and I found after he was gone that he had thereby given more offense than I could have imagined.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1803 March 4, William Wilberforce, “W. Wilberforce, Esq. to Thomas Babington, Esq.”, in Robert Isaac Wilberforce, Samuel Wilberforce, editors, The Correspondence of William Wilberforce. […], volume I, London: John Murray, […], published 1840, →OCLC, page 263:", "text": "Not that I suspect you of thus brusquing matters. It is rather my own fault where, which is too often the case, I am not too negligent about the spiritual concerns of my friends.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1826, [Walter Scott], chapter VIII, in Woodstock; Or, The Cavalier. […], volume I, Edinburgh: […] [James Ballantyne and Co.] for Archibald Constable and Co.; London: Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green, →OCLC, page 201:", "text": "I'll e'en brusque it a little, if he goes on at this rate, and try if I can bring him to a more intelligible mode of speaking.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1839 October, [Egerton Brydges], “Some Recollections of James Hogg. […] No. I.”, in Fraser’s Magazine for Town and Country, volume XX, number CXVIII, London: James Fraser […], →OCLC, page 427, column 1:", "text": "[H]e [Thomas Pringle] was poor, and from the outset [William] Blackwood domineered over and brusqued him. [James] Cleghorn was also poor, but of a sturdy disposition, and he brusqued every body.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1901, Baroness Orczy [i.e., Emma Orczy], “The Ultimatum”, in The Tangled Skein, London: Greening & Co., published 1907, →OCLC, part II (The Lady Ursula), page 117:", "text": "He blamed himself very severely for his attempt at brusquing Fate.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1939 August, George [Edward Gordon] Catlin, “Moralism”, in Anglo-Saxony and Its Tradition, New York, N.Y.: The Macmillan Company, →OCLC, § v, page 272:", "text": "The scholar may object that Professor Macmurray is a 'judaizer' who not only brusques the authority of the Church.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2003, [Nikki Gemmell], “Lesson 5: It is Absolutely Necessary to Wash the Armpits and Hips Every Day”, in The Bride Stripped Bare, London, New York, N.Y.: Fourth Estate, HarperCollins, →ISBN, part I, pages 10–11:", "text": "Sometimes in bed Cole doesn't allow your hand to stay on his chest, he brusques it away. Sometimes he lets your hand rest there.", "type": "quote"}], "glosses": ["To act towards (someone or something) in a curt or rudely abrupt manner."], "links": [["act", "act#Verb"], ["towards", "towards"], ["curt", "curt#Adjective"], ["rudely", "rudely"], ["abrupt", "abrupt#Adjective"], ["manner", "manner#Noun"]], "raw_glosses": ["(transitive, chiefly archaic) To act towards (someone or something) in a curt or rudely abrupt manner."], "tags": ["archaic", "transitive"]}], "sounds": [{"ipa": "/bɹʊsk/", "tags": ["Received-Pronunciation"]}, {"ipa": "/bɹuːsk/", "tags": ["Received-Pronunciation"]}, {"ipa": "/bɹʌsk/", "tags": ["Received-Pronunciation"]}, {"ipa": "/bɹʌsk/", "tags": ["General-American"]}, {"audio": "En-us-brusque.ogg", "mp3_url": "https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/transcoded/2/26/En-us-brusque.ogg/En-us-brusque.ogg.mp3", "ogg_url": "https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/26/En-us-brusque.ogg"}, {"rhymes": "-ʌsk"}], "translations": [{"code": "ko", "lang": "Korean", "roman": "muttukttukhada", "sense": "to act towards (someone or something) in a curt or rudely abrupt manner", "word": "무뚝뚝하다"}, {"code": "ko", "lang": "Korean", "roman": "tungmyeongseureopda", "sense": "to act towards (someone or something) in a curt or rudely abrupt manner", "word": "퉁명스럽다"}], "word": "brusque"}

brusque (English verb) brusque/English/verb: invalid uppercase tag General-American not in or uppercase_tags: {"categories": ["English adjectives", "English entries with incorrect language header", "English lemmas", "English terms borrowed from French", "English terms derived from French", "English terms derived from Italian", "English terms with unknown etymologies", "English verbs", "Entries with translation boxes", "Pages with 2 entries", "Pages with entries", "Rhymes:English/ʌsk", "Rhymes:English/ʌsk/1 syllable", "Terms with Albanian translations", "Terms with Armenian translations", "Terms with Bulgarian translations", "Terms with Catalan translations", "Terms with Cebuano translations", "Terms with Czech translations", "Terms with Danish translations", "Terms with Dutch translations", "Terms with Esperanto translations", "Terms with Faroese translations", "Terms with Finnish translations", "Terms with French translations", "Terms with Georgian translations", "Terms with German translations", "Terms with Greek translations", "Terms with Hungarian translations", "Terms with Icelandic translations", "Terms with Indonesian translations", "Terms with Irish translations", "Terms with Italian translations", "Terms with Japanese translations", "Terms with Korean translations", "Terms with Latin translations", "Terms with Macedonian translations", "Terms with Mandarin translations", "Terms with Occitan translations", "Terms with Polish translations", "Terms with Portuguese translations", "Terms with Russian translations", "Terms with Scots translations", "Terms with Spanish translations", "Terms with Swedish translations", "Terms with Ukrainian translations", "Terms with Veps translations", "en:Personality", "fr:Personality"], "etymology_templates": [{"args": {"1": "adjective"}, "expansion": "adjective", "name": "glossary"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "fr", "3": "brusque"}, "expansion": "French brusque", "name": "bor"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "it", "3": "brusco", "t": "abrupt, sudden, brusque; brisk; eager; sour, tart; unripe; grim-looking"}, "expansion": "Italian brusco (“abrupt, sudden, brusque; brisk; eager; sour, tart; unripe; grim-looking”)", "name": "der"}, {"args": {"1": "en", "2": "etymology unknown"}, "expansion": "etymology unknown", "name": "unknown"}, {"args": {"1": "verb"}, "expansion": "verb", "name": "glossary"}], "etymology_text": "The adjective is borrowed from French brusque, from Italian brusco (“abrupt, sudden, brusque; brisk; eager; sour, tart; unripe; grim-looking”); further etymology unknown.\nThe verb is derived from the adjective.", "forms": [{"form": "brusques", "tags": ["present", "singular", "third-person"]}, {"form": "brusquing", "tags": ["participle", "present"]}, {"form": "brusqued", "tags": ["participle", "past"]}, {"form": "brusqued", "tags": ["past"]}], "head_templates": [{"args": {}, "expansion": "brusque (third-person singular simple present brusques, present participle brusquing, simple past and past participle brusqued)", "name": "en-verb"}], "lang": "English", "lang_code": "en", "pos": "verb", "senses": [{"categories": ["English terms with archaic senses", "English terms with quotations", "English transitive verbs"], "examples": [{"ref": "1740, A[dam] Williamson, “The Disposition of an Army. [General Battles.]”, in Military Memoirs and Maxims of Marshal Turenne. […], Dublin: […] George Faulkner, […], →OCLC, footnote †, page 36:", "text": "Had this been done, Denine had not been bruſqued and carried by Villars at the firſt aſſault, […]", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1781 August 24, Benjamin Franklin, “[Benjamin] Franklin to [William] Carmichael”, in Francis Wharton, editor, The Revolutionary Diplomatic Correspondence of the United States. […] (50th Congress, 1st Session, House of Representatives Mis. Doc.; 603, part 4), volume IV, Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, published 1889, →OCLC, page 660:", "text": "He was indefatigable while he stayed and took true pains, but he brusqued the ministers too much, and I found after he was gone that he had thereby given more offense than I could have imagined.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1803 March 4, William Wilberforce, “W. Wilberforce, Esq. to Thomas Babington, Esq.”, in Robert Isaac Wilberforce, Samuel Wilberforce, editors, The Correspondence of William Wilberforce. […], volume I, London: John Murray, […], published 1840, →OCLC, page 263:", "text": "Not that I suspect you of thus brusquing matters. It is rather my own fault where, which is too often the case, I am not too negligent about the spiritual concerns of my friends.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1826, [Walter Scott], chapter VIII, in Woodstock; Or, The Cavalier. […], volume I, Edinburgh: […] [James Ballantyne and Co.] for Archibald Constable and Co.; London: Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green, →OCLC, page 201:", "text": "I'll e'en brusque it a little, if he goes on at this rate, and try if I can bring him to a more intelligible mode of speaking.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1839 October, [Egerton Brydges], “Some Recollections of James Hogg. […] No. I.”, in Fraser’s Magazine for Town and Country, volume XX, number CXVIII, London: James Fraser […], →OCLC, page 427, column 1:", "text": "[H]e [Thomas Pringle] was poor, and from the outset [William] Blackwood domineered over and brusqued him. [James] Cleghorn was also poor, but of a sturdy disposition, and he brusqued every body.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1901, Baroness Orczy [i.e., Emma Orczy], “The Ultimatum”, in The Tangled Skein, London: Greening & Co., published 1907, →OCLC, part II (The Lady Ursula), page 117:", "text": "He blamed himself very severely for his attempt at brusquing Fate.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "1939 August, George [Edward Gordon] Catlin, “Moralism”, in Anglo-Saxony and Its Tradition, New York, N.Y.: The Macmillan Company, →OCLC, § v, page 272:", "text": "The scholar may object that Professor Macmurray is a 'judaizer' who not only brusques the authority of the Church.", "type": "quote"}, {"ref": "2003, [Nikki Gemmell], “Lesson 5: It is Absolutely Necessary to Wash the Armpits and Hips Every Day”, in The Bride Stripped Bare, London, New York, N.Y.: Fourth Estate, HarperCollins, →ISBN, part I, pages 10–11:", "text": "Sometimes in bed Cole doesn't allow your hand to stay on his chest, he brusques it away. Sometimes he lets your hand rest there.", "type": "quote"}], "glosses": ["To act towards (someone or something) in a curt or rudely abrupt manner."], "links": [["act", "act#Verb"], ["towards", "towards"], ["curt", "curt#Adjective"], ["rudely", "rudely"], ["abrupt", "abrupt#Adjective"], ["manner", "manner#Noun"]], "raw_glosses": ["(transitive, chiefly archaic) To act towards (someone or something) in a curt or rudely abrupt manner."], "tags": ["archaic", "transitive"]}], "sounds": [{"ipa": "/bɹʊsk/", "tags": ["Received-Pronunciation"]}, {"ipa": "/bɹuːsk/", "tags": ["Received-Pronunciation"]}, {"ipa": "/bɹʌsk/", "tags": ["Received-Pronunciation"]}, {"ipa": "/bɹʌsk/", "tags": ["General-American"]}, {"audio": "En-us-brusque.ogg", "mp3_url": "https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/transcoded/2/26/En-us-brusque.ogg/En-us-brusque.ogg.mp3", "ogg_url": "https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/26/En-us-brusque.ogg"}, {"rhymes": "-ʌsk"}], "translations": [{"code": "ko", "lang": "Korean", "roman": "muttukttukhada", "sense": "to act towards (someone or something) in a curt or rudely abrupt manner", "word": "무뚝뚝하다"}, {"code": "ko", "lang": "Korean", "roman": "tungmyeongseureopda", "sense": "to act towards (someone or something) in a curt or rudely abrupt manner", "word": "퉁명스럽다"}], "word": "brusque"}


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