单词 | brosier |
释义 | brosierbroziern. 1. dialect. A bankrupt. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > management of money > insolvency > [noun] > one who is insolvent bankrupt?1563 bare-man1581 Ludgatian1600 non-solvent1647 insolvent1725 fraudulent1796 brosier1826 1826 R. Wilbraham Attempt Gloss. Cheshire (ed. 2) Brosier, a bankrupt. It is often used by boys at play, when one of them has nothing further to stake. 2. Eton College slang. A boy who has spent all his pocket-money. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > management of money > expenditure > [noun] > one who spends spender1393 disburser1611 expender1804 brosier1850 1850 Notes & Queries 1st Ser. 2 44/1 A boy at Eton was a ‘brosier’, when he had spent all his pocket-money. 3. The custom of brosiering: see brosier v. 2. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > consumption of food or drink > eating > processes or manners of eating > [noun] > eating heartily or greedily mouching1607 engorgement1611 engorging1611 demolition1722 tucking in1810 brosier1907 1907 Daily Chron. 17 Dec. 3/4 You have heard of the Eton custom of a ‘brozier’? The attempt to eat out of house and home. 1926 Glasgow Herald 27 Dec. 6 It was reserved for Eton..to invent the..‘brozier’, where eating even to beyond repletion is indulged in to gratify a sense of injury. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1933; most recently modified version published online June 2018). brosierbrozierv. 1. passive. To be bankrupt. dialect. ΚΠ 1796 T. Morton Way to get Married i. i. 4 I am completely brozier'd, cut down to a sixpence, and have left town. 2. transitive. In Eton College phraseology: to attempt to exhaust the supply of food at a meal, as an expression of dissatisfaction with the fare provided; esp. in the phrase to brosier my dame or my tutor. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > consumption of food or drink > eating > processes or manners of eating > eat via specific process [verb (transitive)] > eat voraciously forswallowOE gulch?c1225 afretea1350 moucha1350 glop1362 gloup1362 forglut1393 worrya1400 globbec1400 forsling1481 slonk1481 franch1519 gull1530 to eat up1535 to swallow up1535 engorge1541 gulp1542 ramp1542 slosh1548 raven1557 slop1575 yolp1579 devour1586 to throw oneself on1592 paunch1599 tire1599 glut1600 batten1604 frample1606 gobbet1607 to make a (also one's) meal on (also upon)a1616 to make a (also one's) meal of1622 gorge1631 demolish1639 gourmanda1657 guttle1685 to gawp up1728 nyam1790 gamp1805 slummock1808 annihilate1815 gollop1823 punish1825 engulf1829 hog1836 scoff1846 brosier1850 to pack away1855 wolf1861 locust1868 wallop1892 guts1934 murder1935 woof1943 pelicana1953 pig1979 1850 Notes & Queries 1st Ser. 2 44/1 I well remember the phrase, ‘brozier-my-dame’, signifying to ‘eat her out of house and home’. 1888 W. Rogers Reminisc. 15 I joined a conspiracy to ‘brozier’ him. There were ten or twelve of us [at breakfast], and we devoured everything within reach. 1899 C. K. Paul Memories 111 If a tutor or a dame was suspected of being niggardly, it was determined to ‘brosier’ him or her. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1933; most recently modified version published online September 2018). < n.1826v.1796 |
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