| 单词 | brother | 
| 释义 | brothern.int.α. early Old English broður, Old English broþer (rare), Old English broþor, Old English broðer (Northumbrian), Old English–early Middle English broðor, late Old English broder, late Old English broða (genitive, probably transmission error), early Middle English brother (genitive, in copy of Old English charter), late Middle English brothire, 1500s brodyre (Westmorland); Scottish pre-1700 bruthire; N.E.D. (1888) also records a form Middle English brothere. In Old English, the form broða is probably either an error for broðar or broðra (see section 2β. ).OE Genesis A (1931) 2033 Him þa broðor þry æt spræce þære spedum miclum hældon hygesorge heardum wordum.c1175 ( in A. O. Belfour 12th Cent. Homilies in MS Bodl. 343 (1909) 40 Broðor [OE Vercellibroðor] mine, þone ȝe..to eowre scrifte bicumeð, þonne sceal he eow ȝeornlice acsiæn.c1275 ( Will of Siflæd (Sawyer 1525a) in D. Whitelock Anglo-Saxon Wills (1930) 94 And ic an eiþer mine brother ane wayngong to wude.c1440 (?a1400) St. John Evangelist (Thornton) l. 233 in G. G. Perry Relig. Pieces in Prose & Verse (1914) 104 His hyne holly, and he..Be-come þare thi brothire [rhyme Ilkone to oþer].c1480 (a1400) SS. Cosmas & Damian l. 193 in W. M. Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc. Dial. (1896) II. 297 Þire bruthire thre.1518 A. Clifton Let. in B. Cusack Everyday Eng. 1500–1700 (1998) 224 For her hays bene all my husbandys hukkyllys & brodyre. β. Old English bloþrę (Mercian, transmission error), Old English brodro (Northumbrian), Old English broþra, Old English broþru, Old English broðero (Northumbrian), Old English broðro, Old English (rare)–early Middle English broþre, Old English (Northumbrian)–early Middle English (in copy of Old English charter) broðera, Old English–early Middle English broðra, Old English–early Middle English broðre, Old English–early Middle English (in copy of Old English charter) broðru, late Old English broðore, late Old English broððre (Kentish), early Middle English brothere (in copy of Old English charter), early Middle English broþera (in copy of Old English charter), early Middle English broðere, early Middle English broðræ. Merged with section 2α. after final -e ceased to be pronounced.OE (Northumbrian) Lindisf. Gospels: Matt. xii. 47 Mater tua et fratres tui foris stant : moder ðin & broðra [altered to broðro, OE Rushw. broþer, OE West Saxon Gospels: Corpus Cambr. gebroþra] ðin ute stondes.OE West Saxon Gospels: John (Corpus Cambr.) vii. 3 His broðra [OE Lindisf. broðro, OE Rushw. broðro, c1200 Hatton broðre].OE Paris Psalter (1932) cxxi. 8 For mine broðru ic bidde nu.c1200 ( West Saxon Gospels: John (Hatton) vii. 10 Þa hys broðre [OE Corpus Cambr. gebroðru] foren.a1225 (?OE) MS Lamb. in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1868) 1st Ser. 5 Leoue broðre and sustre!c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1978) l. 8045 Comen þa broðere [c1300 Otho broþers].a1300 Passion our Lord 626 in R. Morris Old Eng. Misc. (1872) 55 Ye beoþ alle broþre [rhyme oþre]. γ. Old English breþere (rare), Old English broeþre (Mercian), Old English (rare)–early Middle English (south-west midlands) breoðre, late Old English–early Middle English breðre, early Middle English breþre, early Middle English breðere, early Middle English briðere. Merged with section 2η. after final -e ceased to be pronounced.OE (Mercian) Rushw. Gospels: Matt. i. 11 Et fratres eius : & broeþre his.lOE Anglo-Saxon Chron. (Laud) (Peterborough interpolation) anno 675 Hu his breðre Peada & Wulfhere & se abbot Saxulf heafden wroht an minstre.c1175 Ormulum (Burchfield transcript) l. 8269 Arrchelawess breþre þreo.a1250 Wohunge ure Lauerd in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1868) 1st Ser. 275 Borne breðre hauen me forwurpen.a1325 (c1250) Gen. & Exod. (1968) l. 1911 If he sag hise breðere mis-faren.a1325 (c1250) Gen. & Exod. (1968) l. 2271 Al ðo briðere of frigti: mod Fellen. δ. late Old English–early Middle English broðren, early Middle English broðenen (transmission error), early Middle English broðeren, Middle English broderen, Middle English broderyn, Middle English brodren, Middle English brodyrn, Middle English brotherryn, Middle English brotheryn, Middle English brotheryne, Middle English brothirn, Middle English brothyrn, Middle English broþeren, Middle English broþerne, Middle English broþren, Middle English broþurne, Middle English–1500s brothern, Middle English–1500s brotherne, Middle English– brothren, 1500s brodurne, 1500s brootherne, 1800s brudderen (U.S. regional (southern)), Middle English–1600s (1800s U.S. regional (southern)) brotheren; also Scottish pre-1700 brotherand, pre-1700 brotheren. lOE tr. Vindicta Salvatoris (Vesp.) in B. Assmann Angelsächsische Homilien u. Heiligenleben (1889) 194 He..begen his broðren þa to cristendome awænde.a1200 MS Trin. Cambr. in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1873) 2nd Ser. 173 Ðe holi godspel..specð..of two broðren.c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1963) l. 1378 His broðren hine cleopeden.1340 Ayenbite (1866) 101 We gadereþ alle oure broþren.a1479 W. Paston in Paston Lett. & Papers (2004) I. 645 All my brodyrn and systyrs.1533 J. Bellenden tr. Livy Hist. Rome (1822) i. 44 To haif supportit his brotherand.1843 C. Mathews Var. Writings 160 Kindly and loving brothren every one.1987 R. Pinckney in P. Jones-Jackson When Roots Die iii. 96 But I'm alive, brothren. ε. late Old English broðras, early Middle English broðeres, Middle English broderis, Middle English broþeres, Middle English broþers, Middle English–1500s brotheres, Middle English– brothers, 1800s brithers (English regional (Devon)), 1800s– bridthers (English regional (Westmorland)); also Scottish pre-1700 brodyrris, 1700s– brithers, 1800s bruthers. lOE Manumission, Exeter (Exeter 3501) in B. Thorpe Diplomatarium Anglicum Ævi Saxonici (1865) 634 Þærto is gewittnes..Ailword Pudding, & Heording, & his broðras.c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1963) l. 4565 Alle his broðeres [c1300 Otho broþers] mid him.c1300 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Otho) (1963) l. 6115 Broþeres hii were [c1275 Calig. ibroðeren].c1450 (?a1350) Seege Troye (Arms) (1927) l. 1643 Hys ij broderis to deth were broȝt.1594 W. Shakespeare Titus Andronicus iii. i. 30 Ah Lucius, for thy brothers let me plead.1641 Naunton's Fragmenta Regalia sig. B3v Being both younger Brothers.1768 A. Ross Fortunate Shepherdess 25 For brithers I hae nane o' them.1860 G. P. R. Pulman Song of Solomon i. 5 My awn brithers an' sisters 'was out wi 'me.1999 P. Mishra Romantics (2001) ii. ii. 124 The Pandav brothers had walked on this ground. ζ. early Middle English breoderen (south-west midlands), early Middle English breðeren, early Middle English breðræn, early Middle English breðren, Middle English brederyn, Middle English bredryne, Middle English breon (perhaps transmission error), Middle English bretherun, Middle English bretheryne, Middle English brethirne, Middle English brethon, Middle English brethourn, Middle English brethrin, Middle English brethryn, Middle English brethyrn, Middle English brethyrne, Middle English bretren, Middle English breþeren, Middle English breþerene, Middle English breþerin, Middle English breþern, Middle English breþerne, Middle English breþeron, Middle English breþeryn, Middle English breþiren, Middle English breþren, Middle English breþrene, Middle English breþurne, Middle English breyeren, Middle English breyerene, Middle English breyerin, Middle English breyern, Middle English breyeroun, Middle English breyeryn, Middle English britheroun, Middle English brithirn, Middle English briþeren, Middle English–1500s bredern, Middle English–1500s brederne, Middle English–1500s bredryn, Middle English–1500s bredurne, Middle English–1500s bretheryn, Middle English–1500s britheren, Middle English–1500s brithern, Middle English–1600s bretherene, Middle English–1600s bretherin, Middle English–1600s bretherne, Middle English–1600s brethrene, Middle English– bretheren, Middle English– brethern, Middle English– brethren (now chiefly in specific senses), late Middle English breþeȝen (probably transmission error), late Middle English–1500s brethen, 1500s bredren, 1500s brethrenne, 1500s brethyn, 1500s–1600s breetherne, 1500s–1600s breethren, 1600s breetheren; also Scottish pre-1700 bredren, pre-1700 bredrene, pre-1700 breetherine, pre-1700 breethering, pre-1700 breidering, pre-1700 breithereine, pre-1700 breitherin, pre-1700 breithrein, pre-1700 breithreine, pre-1700 breithren, pre-1700 breithrin, pre-1700 breithring, pre-1700 bretheren, pre-1700 bretherin, pre-1700 bretherine, pre-1700 brethering, pre-1700 brethern, pre-1700 brethirne, pre-1700 brethreine, pre-1700 brethren, pre-1700 brethring, pre-1700 brithereine, pre-1700 britherine, pre-1700 brithren, pre-1700 brithring; see also bredren n.c1175 ( Ælfric Homily in A. O. Belfour 12th Cent. Homilies in MS Bodl. 343 (1909) 16 Ða wæren tweȝen breðræn [OE Cambr. Ii.4.6 gebroðra].a1200 MS Trin. Cambr. in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1873) 2nd Ser. 175 Þese breðren weren on þe se.c1300 St. Brendan (Harl.) (1844) 26 Hit was mid oure Loverdes pans and mid oure bretherne i-boȝt.c1400 J. Wyclif Eng. Wks. (1880) 284 Among here briþeren.1535 Bible (Coverdale) Matt. i. 2 Iacob begat Iudas & his brethren.1621 R. Burton Anat. Melancholy i. iv. i. 277 Two melancholy brethren.1733 Revol. Politicks vii. 44 He had not stray'd from his Brethern in Point of Loyalty.1870 L. T. Smith Eng. Gilds 181 For collecting the soul-pennies from the bretheren.1994 Wall Street Jrnl. 25 Feb. a14/4 Daimler's management broke ranks with its corporate brethren. η. Middle English bredhere, Middle English bredir, Middle English bredur, Middle English bredyr, Middle English bredyre, Middle English breiþer (northern), Middle English brethere, Middle English brethir, Middle English brethire, Middle English brethre, Middle English brethyr, Middle English breþer, Middle English breþere, Middle English breþir, Middle English breþre, Middle English breþyr, Middle English breyer, Middle English breyere, Middle English brithir, Middle English briþer, Middle English briyir, Middle English bryther, Middle English brythir, Middle English–1500s breder, Middle English–1500s brethur, Middle English–1600s brether; English regional 1800s– breethir (Yorkshire), 1800s– brether (Lancashire); Scottish pre-1700 bredeir, pre-1700 bredir, pre-1700 bredyr, pre-1700 bredyre, pre-1700 brethair, pre-1700 brethire, pre-1700 brethyr, pre-1700 brethyre, pre-1700 breyder, pre-1700 breyir, pre-1700 brither, pre-1700 brithir, pre-1700 1700s– brether, pre-1700 (1800s Shetland) breder, pre-1700 1800s breether, pre-1700 1800s breither, pre-1700 1800s brethir, pre-1700 (1800s– Shetland) breider, 1800s breedir (Shetland); N.E.D. (1888) also records a form Middle English breither. c1180 Notes to Hexateuch (Claud. B.iv) in A. N. Doane & W. P. Stoneman Purloined Lett. (2011) 65 [O]n þan time hi cwæðe hære hælder breder hære [perh. read wære] fæderes.c1330 (?a1300) Sir Tristrem (1886) l. 2725 Þou slouȝ his breþer þre.a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Coll. Phys.) l. 23873 Al er we briþer.c1425 J. Lydgate Troyyes Bk. (Augustus A.iv) ii. l. 4502 In þis wyse wer þe breþre tweyne To heuene rapt.c1460 Ipomedon (Longleat) (1889) 335 They were brethre as on the modre side.1489 (a1380) J. Barbour Bruce (Adv.) iii. 93 Twa breyir war in yat land.a1522 G. Douglas tr. Virgil Æneid (1957) iii. x. l. 41 Tha elrych bredyr.c1600 Diurnal of Remarkable Occurrents (1833) 84 And vtheris his breder.1610 Bible (Douay) II. Prov. vi. 19 Our Lord hateth..him that among brether soweth discordes.1688 W. Scot True Hist. Families ii. 33 His Brether did for Food unto him come.1875 J. H. Nodal & G. Milner Gloss. Lancs. Dial.: Pt. I Brether, brothers.1998 S. Telford In a World a wir Ane 19 Wan of my breider wis a cooper. θ. Middle English brethres (genitive), 1500s brethers; Scottish pre-1700 brethers, 1700s– breethers (chiefly north-eastern). ?a1400 (a1338) R. Mannyng Chron. (Petyt) (1996) ii. 1087 He kast þe Erle Edrik of alle þat tenement þat boþe þe brethres ware þat longed to Sigiferd & to Sir Morkare.1516 in W. H. Hart Historia et Cartularium Monasterii Sancti Petri Gloucestriae (1867) III. p. lxxxvi We ordeyne and assigne the towne monke..to prepare and ordeyne for the saide brethers ayenste the feste of Saynte John Baptyste yerely thirteen honest gownes and on scaplary of blacke cloth.1587 in A. J. Warden Dundee Burgh Laws (1872) 476 For extinguising off quarellingis and debaittis amang the said brethers of craft.1671 in W. Fraser Memorials Family Wemyss (1888) III. 113 His gritte grandfather and myne war full brethers.1785 Songster's Compan. 94 Breethers what are ye about?1882 G. MacDonald Castle Warlock (1883) I. lvi. 320 A'body's breethers an' sisters wi' a'body.1985 A. Hutchison tr. Catullus in Chapman 42 61 Ye've lat me doon tee, an we wis lik breethers.  A. n.  I.  A male sibling or other relative.  1.   a.  A man or boy considered in relation to another person or other people, as the child of the same parents; a male sibling. More generally: a man or boy who has either parent in common with another sibling, a half-brother. Also as a form of address. (The male counterpart of sister n. 1a.)baby brother, big brother, father-brother, foster-brother, germane brother, half-brother, kid brother, little brother, milk brother, mother brother, stepbrother, whole brother, womb brother, etc.: see the first element. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > kinsman or relation > sibling > brother > 			[noun]		 brotherOE born brotherOE broa1530 billy1724 buddy1834 bredda1837 bub1841 boetie1867 bruvver1867 Brer1878 bro1893 boet1920 OE    Ælfric Catholic Homilies: 2nd Ser. 		(Cambr. Gg.3.28)	 x. 88  				On ðam ylcan geare wearð eac ofslegen ecgfridus se æðela cyning..and his cyfesborena broðor siððan rixode. OE    West Saxon Gospels: Luke 		(Corpus Cambr.)	 xii. 13  				Lareow, sege minum breðer þæt he dæle uncer æhta wið me. OE    Wærferð tr.  Gregory Dialogues 		(Corpus Cambr.)	 		(1900)	  iv. lvii. 345  				‘Hwæt is þe, broðor? Hu eart þu nu?’ ?a1160    Anglo-Saxon Chron. 		(Laud)	 		(Peterborough contin.)	 anno 1140  				Þe biscop of Wincestre..suor heom athas ðat he neure ma mid te king his brother wolde halden. a1200						 (?OE)						    MS Trin. Cambr. in  R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies 		(1873)	 2nd Ser. 147  				Þo two sustres wepen for here broðres deað. c1325						 (c1300)						    Chron. Robert of Gloucester 		(Calig.)	 l. 5690  				He was after is broþer king. a1400						 (a1325)						    Cursor Mundi 		(Gött.)	 l. 1214  				Caym his aun broder slogh.   Promptorium Parvulorum 		(Harl. 221)	 54  				Brodyr by the modyr syde onely, germanus. a1500    Warkworth's Chron. 		(1839)	 1  				He create and made dukes his two brythir. 1555    R. Eden tr.  Peter Martyr of Angleria Decades of Newe Worlde  i. ix. f. 40  				Aries Pinzonus, his neuie, by his brothers syde. 1611    Bible 		(King James)	 Prov. xviii. 24  				A friend that sticketh closer then a brother .       View more context for this quotation a1616    W. Shakespeare Comedy of Errors 		(1623)	  ii. ii. 155  				Fie brother, how the world is chang'd with  you.       View more context for this quotation 1709    D. Manley Secret Mem. 151  				Her Brother..was gone abroad..when this Rogue..courted her, or else he had never got his Will of her. 1780    Mirror No. 93  				A sad affair happened last night: my brother and sister had such a tiff! 1850    Ld. Tennyson In Memoriam xxxi. 50  				Where wert thou, brother, those four  days?       View more context for this quotation 1860    J. Abbott Aboriginal Amer. vi. 175  				She would leave them at home under the care of an older brother or sister. 1920    J. S. Fletcher Orange-yellow Diamond 		(1922)	 xxvii. 223  				As a matter of fact they're not brothers—though they're very much alike. 1966    M. R. D. Foot SOE in France vii. 163  				He was one of three brothers,..landed gentry of the Limousin. 2013    Church Times 25 Oct. 11/1  				My brother Ben lives in Canada now, so it was quite an exercise to get all together for a family reunion.  b.  figurative. A close male friend who is loved and valued as a brother.In early use difficult to distinguish from sense  A. 5a. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > love > terms of endearment > 			[noun]		 > of or to a spouse, parent, or close companion > of or to one who fills a brother's place brotherOE OE    tr.  Defensor Liber Scintillarum 		(1969)	 iii. 29  				Omni tempore diligit qui amicus est, et frater in angustiis comprobatur : on eallum timan lufað se þe freond ys & broþer on angnyssum byþ afandud. a1413						 (c1385)						    G. Chaucer Troilus & Criseyde 		(Pierpont Morgan)	 		(1882)	  v. l. 521  				To Pandare his owene broþer dere For loue of god ful pitously he seyde. 1660    A. Woodhead tr.  St. Augustine Life  ix. iv. 153  				In what manner, thou subduedst Alipius, the brother of my soul. 1850    Ld. Tennyson In Memoriam ix. 12  				My friend, the brother of my love. My Arthur! 1879    Frank Leslie's Pleasant Hours 27 205/1  				‘Ruth,’ I said,..‘let me call you so. I am not a stranger now; I am a brother to you.’ 1916    R. Beach Crimson Gardenia & other Tales Adventure 225  				Johnny Cantwell and Mortimer Grant were partners, trail-mates, brothers in soul if not in blood. 2008    B. F. Slattery Liberation v. 116  				It was beyond trust... You are a brother to me. But it would kill these things to say them.  c.  A male animal considered in relation to another animal or other animals, as the offspring of the same parent or parents. ΚΠ c1550    Complaynt Scotl. 		(1979)	 xvii. 119  				This samyn horse busiphal hed ane brother, generit and folit of the samyn horse and meyr that folit hym. 1612    I. M. tr.  Most Famous Hist. Meruine  ii. xvii. 309  				This noble horse (which is the brother to Baucant) I giue vnto thee. 1755    J. Pond Sporting Kalendar 176  				Earl Gower's bay Horse, Brother to Bandy. 1894    Current Lit. Feb. 148/1  				I raised them mules; I broke 'em. They're brothers; one ten, the other 'leven years old. 1908    E. Moorhouse Romance of Derby II. 222  				King Edward won the Derby a second time with a brother to Florizel II. and Persimmon. 2013    Orange County 		(Calif.)	 Reg. 		(Nexis)	 4 Nov.  				I have two dogs. They are Labradors, brother and sister. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > kinsman or relation > 			[noun]		 > male relative mayeOE brotherOE OE    Ælfric Old Eng. Hexateuch: Gen. 		(Claud.)	 xiii. 11  				Loth ða geceas him þone eard wið Iordanen & ferde fram eastdæle, & hi wurdon totwæmede heora ægðer fram hys breðer [L. a fratre suo]. c1350						 (a1333)						    William of Shoreham Poems 		(1902)	 43  				God ches..þe kenred of leuy, Offyce for to fonge Ase broþeren For to seruy ine godes house. a1382    Bible 		(Wycliffite, E.V.)	 		(Bodl. 959)	 		(1959)	 Gen. xiv. 14  				Loth his broþer taken [altered from ytaken]. 1611    Bible 		(King James)	 Gen. xiii. 8  				And Abram said vnto Lot, Let there be no strife, I pray thee, betweene mee and thee..for wee bee brethren .       View more context for this quotation 1611    Bible 		(King James)	 Gen. xxix. 12  				Jacob told Rachel, that hee was her fathers brother .       View more context for this quotation  3.  A brother-in-law. Also as a form of address. Cf. good-brother n. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > kinsman or relation > sibling > brother > 			[noun]		 > brother-in-law odamOE brothera1375 brother-in-lawa1375 good-brother1487 brother-law?1583 levir1865 a1375						 (c1350)						    William of Palerne 		(1867)	 l. 5304 (MED)  				No man..miȝt telle þe ioye þat þe bold breþeren..made, william & alphouns. 1463    in  J. P. Collier Trevelyan Papers 		(1857)	 83 (MED)  				Therfore, Broder, remembre the dyscharge of our Cosyn your moders soule. 1617    R. Newman Let. in  B. Cusack Everyday Eng. 1500–1700 		(1998)	 211  				My father Allyen..& my brther Edward Allyen. 1682    A. Behn False Count  i. ii. 7  				Sh'oud you do so rude a thing to your new Brother, your Wife wou'd think you were jealous of her. 1813    J. Austen Pride & Prejudice III. x. 189  				Unwilling, for her sister's sake, to provoke him, she only said in reply.., ‘Come, Mr. Wickham, we are brother and sister, you know. Do not let us quarrel about the past.’ 1865    E. Lynn Linton Grasp your Nettle III. ix. 238  				My dear sisters, I am now your brother! let me embrace you! 1978    D. Gelfan tr.  Y. Bonaventura in  J. Wilbert et al.  Folk Lit. Gê Indians I. clxi. 403  				His brother-in-law saw him and said: ‘Oh, Brother, you always escape.’ 2012    R. R. Parameswaran I am Executioner 63  				Behind me stood the very uncle-in-law who was my nominal supervisor in Madras, and alongside him were my future brothers and cousins.  II.  A person bound to another by shared experiences or by membership of a particular group.Typically with reference to a man, although collective plural uses may refer to a group consisting of men and women.  4.   a.  A person bound to another by reason of a shared humanity; a fellow human being; an equal. Cf. a man and (a) brother at  Phrases 5, brotherhood of man at brotherhood n. 2c.Frequently (esp. in early use) in the context of Christian teaching, and thus difficult to distinguish from sense  A. 8a. ΚΠ OE    Paris Psalter 		(1932)	 cxxi. 8  				For mine broðru [L. propter fratres meos] ic bidde nu, and mine þa neahstan nemne swylce, þæt we sibbe on ðe symble habbon. OE    Ælfric Homily 		(Trin. Cambr. B.15.34)	 in  J. C. Pope Homilies of Ælfric 		(1968)	 II. 498  				Ateoh, þu hiwere, ærest þone beam ut of ðinum eagan, and þu locast þonne þæt þu of ðines broþor eagan þæt mot ut ateo. a1325						 (c1280)						    Southern Passion 		(Pepys 2344)	 		(1927)	 l. 721 (MED)  				As ofte as ȝe dude hit nouȝt to my leste broþer..ȝe ne dude hit to me. a1400						 (a1325)						    Cursor Mundi 		(Vesp.)	 l. 854  				His grace it was..þat he wald bicom our broþer. a1425    Rule St. Benet 		(Lansd.)	 		(1902)	 5 (MED)  				In þi broþir ehe, þu ses a stra. ?a1475    Ludus Coventriae 		(1922)	 77 (MED)  				Se how good and how glad it is bretheryn ffor to dwelle in on. 1526    W. Bonde Pylgrimage of Perfection  iii. sig. FFFiiiv  				Their neyghbours. I meane their susterne and bretherne. 1600    W. Shakespeare Much Ado about Nothing  ii. i. 57  				Adams sonnes are my brethren .       View more context for this quotation 1667    J. Milton Paradise Lost  iii. 297  				So Man..Shall satisfie for Man, be judg'd and die..and rising with him raise His Brethren .       View more context for this quotation 1723    J. Blair Our Saviour's Divine Serm. on Mount IV. vii. 109  				His Brethren of the sinful Race of Adam. 1795    New Ann. Reg. 1794 Brit. & Foreign Hist. 390/2  				Liberty and equality..recalled to the minds of men that they are all equal in rights, that they are all brothers. 1839    H. W. Longfellow Voices of Night 7  				Footprints, that..A forlorn and shipwrecked brother, Seeing, shall take heart again. 1872    J. Morley Voltaire v. 278  				An ungrateful infection, weakening and corrupting the future of his brothers. 1906    ‘O. Henry’ Four Million 32  				We are all brothers—Chinamen, Englishmen, Zulus, Patagonians and the people in the bend of the Kaw River. 2013    J. L. High in  D. Sevin  & C. Zeller Heinrich von Kleist 141  				The familiar Schillerian ‘Band’ that makes all humans brothers.  b.  A person forming part of a group bound together by geographical or ethnic ties; a fellow citizen or fellow countryman; a compatriot. ΘΚΠ the world > people > nations > compatriots > 			[noun]		 > compatriot brotherOE countrymanc1390 fellow subject1549 fellow countryman1577 patriot1596 landsman1605 compatriot1611 domestic1620 paisan1940 OE    Old Eng. Hexateuch: Exod. 		(Claud.)	 ii. 11  				Moyses..geseah..hu sum Egyptisc man sloh sumne Ebreiscne of his broðrum [L. de Hebraeis fratribus suis]. a1382    Bible 		(Wycliffite, E.V.)	 		(Bodl. 959)	 		(1961)	 Deut. xviii. 2  				Prestis & leuytees..noon oþer þyng þei sholyn take of þe possession of þer briþryn [a1425 L.V. britheren]. 1555    W. Turner New Bk. Spirituall Physik f. 1v  				My brethren and countre men, the noble and gentyl men of Englande. 1644    P. Nye Exhort. to taking Solemne League 7  				Let no faithfull English heart bee afraid to joyne with our Brethren of all the three Kingdomes in this solemne League. 1653    N. Burt New-yeers-gift 12  				Fellow-Commoners, who are the Commonwealth, or Native Country-men, or brothers English-men. 1714    J. Fortescue-Aland Fortescue's Governance of Eng. 30  				The Lombards..Brothers and Kinsmen of the Saxons. 1868    tr.  Maximilian I of Mexico Recollections II. 325  				Would that we could bring home to our brethren in the Fatherland this taste of the English for nature's comforts! 1897    Punch 26 June 329/1  				Wheresoever they come from, the Sons of the Empire are welcomed by their British brethren with fervour and delight. 1935    J. S. Huxley  & A. C. Haddon We Europeans vii. 213  				The largest nation in the Balkan peninsula is that of the Jugoslavs.., who are largely separated from their northern brethren by the Magyars and Rumanians. 1954    Middle East Jrnl. 8 311  				Algerians have tended to follow the example of their Arab brothers elsewhere and turn to nationalism for deliverance. 1966    C. G. Seligman Races of Afr. 		(ed. 4)	 vi. 86  				The extinct Guanches of the Canary Islands showed at least as much racial mixture as their brethren of the mainland. 2008    Hindustan Times 		(Nexis)	 19 Apr.  				Scores of exiled Tibetans..set out on foot towards Tibet to support their brethren who are facing oppression under the Chinese regime.  c.  Used as a familiar form of address to an unrelated man, esp. one whose name is not known. Cf. sister n. 4b. In later use chiefly U.S. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > love > terms of endearment > 			[noun]		 > of or to a man sonOE brotherOE friarc1290 lad1535 fellow1577 bubba1841 old top1856 bra1869 bro1918 mush1936 ouboet1953 coz1961 oppa1963 bruv1970 OE    Old Eng. Hexateuch: Gen. 		(Claud.)	 xxix. 4  				He cwæð to þam hyrdum: Broðru [L. fratres], hwanon synd ge? c1405						 (c1395)						    G. Chaucer Friar's Tale 		(Hengwrt)	 		(2003)	 l. 95  				Deere brother Thow art a bailly, and I am another. a1450    York Plays 		(1885)	 121 (MED)  				Breder, bees all blythe and glad. ?1569    H. Gough tr.  B. Georgijević Ofspring House of Ottomanno sig. I.iiv  				Ni brate, Zabludiossi daleko. No brother, you haue erred greatlye. 1686    Hickes's Coffee-house Jests 		(ed. 4)	 ccviii. 136  				Peace Brother, says he, hold thy tongue, she'll be a Woman to morrow. 1748    T. Smollett Roderick Random I. xxiv. 219  				Yo, ho! brother, you must come along with me. 1851    G. Borrow Lavengro 		(1852)	 lxxi. 369  				I ate a piece of the cake. ‘Well, brother, how do you like it?’ said the girl, looking fixedly at me. 1898    McClure's Mag. July 228/1  				The great chief stood there, and no pale-face said to him, ‘Come here, brother, and eat.’ 1912    Dial. Notes 3 572  				Say, brother, can you tell me how far it is to Veedersburg? 1932    Bluefield 		(W. Va.)	 Daily Tel. 21 Oct. 6/5  				The effect is eerie, particularly when Weber goes into a ‘torch’ number such as ‘Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?’ 2002    Daily Globe 		(Ironwood, Mich.)	 17 July 5/1  				Hey, brother, have you washed your hands?  d.  colloquial (chiefly in African-American usage). A (fellow) black man. Also as a form of address. Cf. sister n. 4f,  bro n. 5a. ΚΠ 1910    T. A. Dorgan in  N.Y. Evening Jrnl. 3 Feb. 12/3  				Those meerschaum-colored brothers in the South will be wearing diamond rings and plug hats. 1922    Negro in Chicago 		(Chicago Comm. Race Relations)	 ix. 563  				The poor proprietor of the place, if he or she is one of the ‘brothers’ or ‘sisters’, is almost helpless. 1927    E. C. L. Adams Congaree Sketches ix. 15  				Brother, you know hell is a bad place when dey got generations of ole sisters pen up together. 1965    Los Angeles Times 14 Aug. 1/3  				Light-skinned Negroes such as myself were targets of rocks and bottles until someone standing nearby would shout..‘He's a brother—lay off.’ 1993    Face Sept. 69/1  				They saw the brothers at the party shouting ‘What's up nigga?’ to one another. 2004    W. Marsalis  & S. S. Hinds To Young Jazz Musician 		(2005)	 ix. 104  				Brothers need to be out here trying to compete for jobs and education. 2007    Crisis Jan. 8/1  				Hey brother! Where can I find some soul food?  5.   a.  A male comrade or companion; an associate; a person considered as sharing the same experiences, or set of circumstances, as another. Also as a form of address. Usually in form brothers in plural.blood brother, sword brother, sworn brother, wed brother: see the first element. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > social relations > association, fellowship, or companionship > a companion or associate > 			[noun]		 yferec870 brothereOE ymonec950 headlingOE ferec975 fellowOE friendOE eveningOE evenlinglOE even-nexta1225 compeerc1275 monec1300 companiona1325 partnerc1330 peerc1330 neighbour?c1335 falec1380 matec1380 makec1385 companya1425 sociatec1430 marrow1440 partyc1443 customera1450 conferec1450 pareil?c1450 comparcionerc1475 resortc1475 socius1480 copartner?1504 billy?a1513 accomplice1550 panion1553 consorterc1556 compartner1564 co-mate1576 copemate1577 competitor1579 consociate1579 coach-companion1589 comrade1591 consort1592 callant1597 comrado1598 associate1601 coach-fellow1602 rival1604 social1604 concomitanta1639 concerner1639 consociator1646 compane1647 societary1652 bor1677 socius1678 interessora1687 companioness1691 rendezvouser1742 connection1780 frater1786 matey1794 pardner1795 left bower1829 running mate1867 stable companion1868 pard1872 buddy1895 maat1900 bro1922 stable-mate1941 bredda1969 Ndugu1973 eOE    tr.  Bede Eccl. Hist. 		(Tanner)	  iii. xix. 244  				Þa onbrægd se his geþofta & locade to him, & þus cwæð: Eala broðor [L. frater] Ecgberht. OE    Anglo-Saxon Chron. 		(Tiber. B.iv)	 anno 1016  				Coman begen þa cyningas togædre..& wurdon feolagan & wedbroðra. c1225						 (?c1200)						    St. Margaret 		(Bodl.)	 		(1934)	 30 (MED)  				Þu..art mi broðeres bone Rufines. a1300						 (c1275)						    Physiologus 		(1991)	 l. 478  				Ne canne ðan non oðer Oc remeð mid his broðer. a1400						 (a1325)						    Cursor Mundi 		(Vesp.)	 l. 13086  				Breþer..mi dere and freinde, Nu yee sal mine erand wend. c1405						 (c1385)						    G. Chaucer Knight's Tale 		(Hengwrt)	 		(2003)	 l. 303  				I tolde thee myn auenture As to my cosyn, and my brother sworn. a1450    Generides 		(Pierpont Morgan)	 		(1865)	 l. 4499  				Sir, brethre we ar, both ye and I. c1500						 (?a1437)						    Kingis Quair 		(1939)	 clxxxiv (MED)  				Beseching..For all my brethir that ben in this place, This is to seyne, that servandis ar to lufe. 1611    Bible 		(King James)	 Job xxx. 29  				I am a brother to dragons, and a companion to  owles.       View more context for this quotation 1611    Bible 		(King James)	 Prov. xviii. 9  				Hee also that is slouthful in his worke, is brother to him that is a great  waster.       View more context for this quotation 1632    P. Massinger Maid of Honour  ii. ii. sig. E  				I will draw my sword. O for a brother! 1675    W. Wycherley Country-wife  iii. ii. 35  				Perhaps you may prove as weak a brother amongst 'em that way as t'other. 1786    R. Burns Poems 213  				Fareweel, ‘my rhyme-composing’ brither! 1820    P. B. Shelley Prometheus Unbound  i. i. 48  				A legioned band of linked brothers. 1853    New Sporting Mag. Jan. 62  				I would advise my sporting brothers to be more solicitous about their powder than their shot. 1968    C. S. Leach tr.  C. Miłosz Native Realm 134  				Polish and Russian revolutionists should have been brothers in their common struggle against Czardom. 1993    P. Auster Coll. Prose 		(2003)	 493  				To write a work of fiction, one must be free to say what one has to say. I have exercised that freedom with every word I have written—and so has Salman Rushdie. That is what makes us brothers, and that is why his predicament is also mine.  b.  Chiefly literary. In various phrases with of or in, referring to a (male) comrade or associate in a specified sphere or occupation, as  brother of the blade,  brother of the gusset,  brother of the long robe,  brother of the quill,  brother in trade, etc.See also brother of the angle at  Phrases 3, brother in arms at  Phrases 1. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > literature > writer or author > 			[noun]		 > fellow-writer brother of the quill1680 1615    T. Overbury et al.  New & Choise Characters with Wife 		(6th impr.)	 sig. K7  				Hee is a Gentleman and a brother of the Sword. 1652    Hinds Elder Brother 6  				He takes his leave of him, and resolves to live a brother of the Blade, buyes him a pretty highway Nag, a good Sword and Case of private Pistolls. 1680    Observ. ‘Curse Ye Meroz’ 7  				This Aphorism is but borrowed from another Brother of the Quill. 1737    J. Ozell tr.  F. Rabelais Wks. I. liv. 370  				No huff-cap Squire, or Brother of the Blade. 1771    T. Smollett Humphry Clinker II. 15  				His house is open to all unfortunate brothers of the quill. ?1793    J. Caulfield Blackguardiana  				Brother of the gusset, a pimp. 1877    W. Kirby Chien d'Or xxxviii. 399  				The lawyers of old France..did not differ in any essential point from their brothers of the long robe in New-France. 1878    J. Morley Diderot II. 122  				A chivalrous defender of poorer brethren in art. 1886    Longman's Mag. Mar. 552  				Our brethren of the pen over-seas. 1902    Westm. Gaz. 29 Dec. 10/1  				If he wishes to send a letter by post to his nearest brother-in-trade, seven miles distant, it has to cover 185 miles before it reaches him. 1979    Texas Monthly May 150/1  				Among us brethren of the ruddy neck, savingness and salvage have never lost their currency. 2004    Africa News 		(Nexis)	 3 Dec.  				It is possible for Tunj to pass away with just scant mention from his brethren of the pen.  6.   a.  A (fellow) member of a professional or trade organization, such as a guild, company, trade union, etc., or of a society or fraternity. More generally: a (fellow) professional or tradesperson. Also as a prefixed title. Cf. brotherhood n. 1. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > social relations > an association, society, or organization > types of association, society, or organization > 			[noun]		 > guild of medieval origin > a member guild-brother1382 brother1389 craftman1415 craftsman1587 guild1605 guildsman1873 1389    in  R. W. Chambers  & M. Daunt Bk. London Eng. 		(1931)	 45  				To noriche more loue bytwene þe bretheren & sustren of þe bretherhede. c1390						 (a1376)						    W. Langland Piers Plowman 		(Vernon)	 		(1867)	 A.  v. l. 246  				Dismas my broþer bi-souȝte þe of grace. 1418    in  R. W. Chambers  & M. Daunt Bk. London Eng. 		(1931)	 196 (MED)  				Euery brothir of the same felashepe..shal quarterly paye to ther prest vj d. a1483    in  J. T. Smith  & L. T. Smith Eng. Gilds 		(1870)	 315  				Yf any Brother of the fforsayd ffraternyte and crafte dysspysse anoder. 1580    J. Stow Chrons. of Eng. 1217  				Corpus Christi Colledge was firste begunne to be buylded by the Alderman and brethren of Corpus Christi Guild. 1609    J. Skene tr.  Regiam Majestatem 142  				Gif ane man, quha is nocht ane brother of this Gilde..leaues in legacie, any part of his gudes to this Gild: we receave him as ane of our brether. 1638    H. Adamson Muses Threnodie iii. 32  				We be brethren of the Rosie Crosse; We have the Mason word, and second sight. 1722    R. Steele Conscious Lovers  ii. i. 20  				What shall I do for a Brother in the Case? 1795    in  R. Humphreys Mem. J. Decastro 		(1824)	 247  				As many Grands and Brothers of the Odd Fellows, Bucks, Masonic and other Lodges. 1805    Med. & Physical Jrnl. 14 231  				To furnish their professional brethren of the circle with a supply of recent vaccine fluid. 1824    J. Johnson Typographia I. 559  				Admitted a brother of the Stationers' Company. 1888    Calif. Med. Jrnl. Dec. 518  				A female brother, from the Sierras,..was not pleased with the bill of fare. 1896    Railway Conductor Apr. 272/1  				We are glad to see Brother Billy White around at Division meetings again. 1915    Our Jrnl. 		(Metal Polishers Union of N. Amer.)	 May 51/2  				I want to have Brother Flynn to understand that I am no women-hater, but one who wishes to see them flourish. 1922    J. J. Lanier Washington, Great Amer. Mason  i. 25  				Tradition says that Washington and his Masonic brethren held Lodges in this cavern. 1955    M. Millar Beast in View xiv. 171  				She had met Evelyn..on a double date with one of John's fraternity brothers. 2006    Managem. Today Jan. 5/2  				One just sighs when the brothers vote for another day of inaction on the London Underground for the umpteenth time.  b.  A junior member of a municipal council or corporation. Cf. alderman n. 3. Now historical. ΘΚΠ society > authority > rule or government > ruler or governor > deliberative, legislative, or administrative assembly > types of deliberative or legislative assembly > 			[noun]		 > of a company or corporation > member of brother1602 1602    2nd Pt. Returne from Parnassus  iv. iv. 1816 in  Three Parnassus Plays 		(1949)	 342  				Two states of an incorporation, the one of the Aldermen, the other of the Brethren. 1704    London Gaz. No. 4066/3  				The Mayor..Aldermen, Brethren, and Capital Burgesses, of Your Majesty's Ancient Borough of Derby. 1811    R. Fenton Hist. Tour Pembrokeshire 207  				It appointed twenty-four common councilmen, fifteen of them aldermen, and the others brethren. 1834    in  1st Rep. Commissioners Munic. Corporations Eng. & Wales 		(1835)	 App.  v. 2932 in  Parl. Papers (H.C. 116) XXVI. 1  				The whole common council therefore is composed of—Ten Chief Benchers, or Aldermen, Three Benchers, and Fifteen or seventeen Younger Brethren, or Common Councilmen. 2011    I. Collard Liverpool City Centre through Time 5  				By the middle of the sixteenth century, the town was led by the mayor and two bailiffs and a number of Mayor's Brethren, who were later called aldermen.  c.  A member of Trinity House, an association responsible for the licensing of ships' pilots and the construction and maintenance of buoys and lighthouses around the coasts of England and Wales. See Trinity House n. at trinity n. Compounds 2.The Master and Elder Brethren of Trinity House make up the governing body of the corporation, and are assisted by a larger body of Younger Brethren. The brethren are drawn from various sectors of the maritime community. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > one who travels by water or sea > sailor > sailors involved in specific duties or activities > 			[noun]		 > helmsman or pilot > Trinity House pilot brother1696 branch-pilot1783 1616    S. Page Diuine Sea-seruice Ep. Ded. in  God be Thanked sig. E4  				To the Right Worshipfvll the Master, Wardens, and Assistants, and the whole Societie of the Brethren of the Trinitie-house, of Saint Clements in Deptford-Strand. 1696    London Gaz. No. 3176/3  				The Master, Wardens, Assistants and Elder Brethren of the Society of the Trinity-House at Newcastle-upon-Tyne. 1766    J. Entick Surv. London in  New Hist. London IV. 330  				This corporation [sc. Trinity House] is governed by a master, 4 wardens, 8 assistants, and 18 elder brethren. The inferior members..are called younger brethren; into which number any master or mate, skilled in navigation, may be admitted. 1790    Leeds Intelligencer 14 Sept.  				Lately was married..Capt. Stickney, of Hull, a brother of the Trinity House. 1879    Sat. Mag. 22 Feb. 343/1  				The Elder Brethren of the Trinity House had had the wisdom to make him [sc. Faraday] their ‘Scientific Adviser’. 1886    Punch 10 Apr. 170/2  				He sed as he was a Brother of the Trinity House, and he claimed for his Elder Brothers as they put up the most usefoolest Lites round the Coast. 1907    W. Jerrold Highways & Byways Kent xxii. 423  				The headquarters of the Trinity House Brethren are on Tower Hill. 1987    B. Farthing Internat. Shipping vi. 73  				In cases involving collisions and salvage the judge is usually assisted by two elder brethren of Trinity House on matters of fact and seamanship. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > social class > nobility > title > title or form of address for persons of rank > 			[noun]		 > titles applied to royalty > by or for each other brother1418 cousinc1418 1418    in  R. W. Chambers  & M. Daunt Bk. London Eng. 		(1931)	 291  				[This letter of the king of England encloses a copy of a letter from] oure Broþer þe Duc of Bretaigne. 1534    King James V Let. to Henry VIII 5 June in  Facsimiles National MSS 		(1865)	 II. xxviii  				Derrest and bestbelouit Brother and Oncle..Ȝour lowynge hartly Brothere and Nepho James Rex. 1535    Instr. to Eng. Ambassador in  Facsimiles National MSS 		(1865)	 II. xxix  				To be frank and playn with his saide goode Brother [of France], his Majestie woll in noo wise, directly or indirectly, confesse the Bisshop of Rome to have any jurisdiction in Princes. 1553    Queen Mary I Let. 31 July in  Facsimiles National MSS 		(1865)	 III.  iii. iv  				Our good brothere the ffrenche king. a1600						 (    Rec. Bluemantle Pursuivant 		(Julius)	 in  C. L. Kingsford Eng. Hist. Lit. 15th Cent. 		(1913)	 381 (MED)  				The King..sent a right worshipfull man in his embassat to ye right mighty prynce his brother, the Duc of Bourgoyne. 1711    R. Steele Spectator No. 64. ⁋1  				Princes and Sovereigns..are stiled Brothers to each other. 1849    T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. I. 199  				Lewis..was as licentious..as his brother of England. 1882    J. Frost Hist. Mexico & its Wars v. 88  				Montezuma was happy to hear of the existence of his royal brother of Spain. 1900    F. S. Isham Under Rose 		(1903)	 xxix. 416  				‘We have heard your story, my child, from our brother, the emperor,’ the king was saying.  III.  Religious senses.  8.   a.  A fellow (male) member of the Christian Church as a whole, or of a particular denomination; a fellow Christian. Also more generally: a fellow (male) believer of any faith; a co-religionist. Also as a form of address. ΘΚΠ society > faith > aspects of faith > religion > a religion or church > 			[noun]		 > membership in > person having brotherOE sisterOE church memberc1475 churchman1612 religionist1651 churchwoman1681 Zioner1681 churchite1791 bredren1809 co-religionist1842 co-religionary1861 triumphalist1967 OE    Vercelli Homilies 		(1992)	 iii. 74  				Broðor mine, þonne ge rihtre andetnesse to eowrum scriftum becumen, þonne sceal he eow geornlice ahsian [etc.]. OE    Homily 		(Cambr. Ii.4.6)	 in  J. Bazire  & J. E. Cross Eleven Old Eng. Rogationtide Homilies 		(1989)	 98  				Gyf þonne se cristena mann þe þin broðor is þe ahwar geyfelode, þæt þu scealt miltsigende forgyfan. c1175    Ormulum 		(Burchfield transcript)	 Ded. l. 3  				Nu broþerr wallterr..broþerr min i crisstenndom..Icc hafe don swa summ þu badd. 1340    Ayenbite 		(1866)	 101  				We gadereþ alle oure broþren mid ous of adopcion. c1449    R. Pecock Repressor 		(1860)	 63  				Thi Cristen britheren and sistren. 1521    Bp. J. Fisher Wks. 329  				In the epistoles of oure ryght dere broder Paule. 1549    Bk. Common Prayer 		(STC 16267)	 Buriall f. xxiiii*v  				The soule of this our brother departed. 1552    Bk. Common Prayer 		(STC 16279)	 Morninge Prayer sig. .iv  				Dearely beloued brethren, the scripture moueth vs in sondrye places, to acknowledge and confesse our manyfolde synnes and wyckednesse. 1613    L. Bayly Practise of Pietie 		(ed. 3)	 917  				We are bold to become humble suiters, vnto thy diuine Maiestie, in the behalfe of this our deere Brother. 1782    W. Cowper Nightingale & Glow-worm in  Poems 327  				Hence jarring sectaries may learn..That brother should not war with brother. 1857    J. Ruskin Polit. Econ. Art i. 20  				We expect a man in a black gown, supposed to be telling us truth, to address us as brethren. 1872    J. Morley Voltaire iv. 166  				The Protestants..found warm hospitality among their northern brethren. 1874    W. Simpson Meeting the Sun 		(1877)	 xiii. 119  				These followers of the Prophet have the feeling that Christians are their brothers in faith. 1922    F. Schevill Hist. Balkan Penins. xxvii. 427  				The indolent Ottomans could always redress the balance by calling on their brothers in Islam, the roving Kurds, to reduce the pride of the Armenians. 1923    Smart Set Jan. 71/1  				The other brethren and sistern who had taught him had been entirely too free with their references to the hot hereafter reserved for sinners. 2010    L. E. Caffery Years of Grace, Life of Mercy 129  				After the service, pastor Mike Vario mentioned that there was a brother in the church that was really hurting.  b.  In plural, chiefly as  the Brethren. The members of the early Christian church. ΘΚΠ society > faith > sect > Christianity > Protestantism > Puritanism > 			[noun]		 > person > collective the BrethreneOE godly1650 holiness1888 eOE    Laws of Ælfred 		(Corpus Cambr. 173)	 xlix. §3. 42  				Ða apostolas & þa eldran broðor [L. seniores fratres] hælo eow wyscað. c1384    Bible 		(Wycliffite, E.V.)	 		(Douce 369(2))	 		(1850)	 Deeds xviii. 18  				Poul.., seiynge far wel to bretheren [L. fratris], by boot cam to Sirie. 1534    Bible 		(Tyndale rev. Joye)	 Acts xviii. 18  				Paul..toke his leave of the brethren. 1563    L. Humphrey Nobles or of Nobilitye  ii. sig. p.vv  				In the Apostles time, they bestowed their almes on the godlye poore. And Paule, ofte gathered for the brethren at Hierusalem. 1611    Bible 		(King James)	 Acts xi. 29  				The disciples, euery man according to his abilitie, determined to send reliefe vnto the brethren which dwelt in  Iudea.       View more context for this quotation 1681    E. Hickeringill Naked Truth: Pt. II. 35  				St. Paul indeed went to visit the Brethren. 1740    N. Lardner Credibility Gospel Hist.: Pt. II. IV.  i. xliii. 580  				Novatus..endeavoured to cast the blame of all he had done upon some of the brethren. 1855    A. P. Stanley Epist. St. Paul to Corinthians II. 142  				His heart was lighted up at his meeting with the brethren at Appii Forum. a1889    J. B. Lightfoot Notes on Epist. St. Paul 		(1904)	 156  				St. Paul was generally attended by one or more of the brethren. 1946    Bible 		(R.S.V.)	 Philipp. iv. 21  				The brethren who are with me greet you. 2009    M. Sleeman Geogr. & Ascension Narr. in Acts 213  				The brethren rally around Saul.  c.  In plural as  Brethren. The members of any of various Christian organizations or denominations originating during or since the Reformation and aiming to adhere to New Testament principles, frequently recognizing no official order of ministers and having no formal creed; (sometimes) spec. = Plymouth Brethren n.   Also in the names of such organizations, as  Brethren in Christ,  Christian Brethren, etc.Chiefly as a self-designation, but sometimes (in early use) applied ironically by opponents.Exclusive Brethren, Hutterian Brethren, Old Order Brethren, Open Brethren, United Brethren, etc.: see the first element. ΘΚΠ society > faith > sect > Christianity > Protestantism > Plymouth Brethren > 			[noun]		 > person > collective Brethren1581 Plymouth Brethren1838 saint1838 1581    W. Allen Apol. Two Eng. Colleges f. 53  				There is not the poorest artificer of al the Anabaptistes in Holland, or of the Puritans, Brethren of loue, and Protestants in England..but he wil oppose him self boldly against al the Church. 1648    J. Cotton Way Congregational Churches  ii. i. 10  				It is an Ordinance of Christ, to elect Officers, (Deacons and Elders:) for this is the power and priviledge of the Church of Brethren. 1655    T. Fuller Church-hist. Brit.  ix. 139  				Heartned hereat the Brethren, who hitherto had no particular platforme of discipline amongst themselves..began in a solemne Councell..to conclude, on a certain forme, as followeth. 1750    J. Wesley Let. 27 Nov. 		(1931)	 III. 52  				The Moravians..commonly style themselves ‘The Brethren’ or ‘The Moravian Church’. 1849    		(title)	  				A Retrospect of Events that have taken place amongst the Brethren. 1885    J. H. Dubbs Hist. Man. Reformed Church United States vii. 222  				His memory is greatly cherished in the Church of the ‘United Brethren in Christ’. 1886    Whitaker's Almanack 195/2  				The Brethren, or Plymouth Brethren, have 23 places of worship in London. 1909    Encycl. Relig. & Ethics II. 845/2  				The ‘Open’ Brethren..fraternize freely with other Christians. 1995    R. K. Burkinshaw Pilgrims in Lotus Land i. 37  				By 1917, the Plymouth Brethren (more recently known as the Christian Brethren) had established at least twelve congregations. 2005    Seed Oct. 30/1  				The Dover area was home to a wide diversity of sects, including Mennonites, Lutherans, Brethren and Amish.  d.  As a title or form of address preceding the name of a male lay preacher or (later) a Protestant minister or pastor. In later use chiefly U.S.In early use not always clearly distinguishable from sense  A. 8a. ΘΚΠ society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > 			[noun]		 > address or title of his reverencea1438 your reverence?a1440 fathershipa1500 dompnea1536 domine1566 reverendship1609 Revd1670 rookship1710 brother1741 venerability1843 Pfarrer1844 Rev.1862 reverend1869 1741    J. Wesley Let. 21 Apr. 		(1931)	 I. 353  				I am not clear that Brother Maxfield should not expound at Greyhound Lane; nor can I as yet do without him. Our clergymen have miscarried full as much as the laymen. 1810    C. Anderson Let. in  H. Anderson Life & Lett. C. Anderson 		(1854)	 iv. 115  				Brother Barclay has been out on a..preaching tour through a most destitute part of the country. 1877    Spirit of Times 24 Nov. 451/1  				The cause of it [sc. an outburst] is a..Paul-like pulpit utterance, by Brother Beecher, of Plymouth Church, last Sunday. 1923    New Oxf. 		(Pa.)	 Item 29 Nov.  				She turned to the young preacher. ‘Brother Hopkins... My home is your home.’ 1988    M. Ivins Molly Ivins can't say That, can She? 		(1991)	 265  				Back in 1975, there was an unholy uproar in the state over another preacher, Brother Lester Roloff of Corpus Christi, since gone to glory. 2009    G. Dayal B. Eno's Another Green World x. 81  				Reich ran into a black Pentecostal preacher named Brother Walter, who was dishing out a sermon to passersby.  9.   a.  A (fellow) member of a male religious order. Cf. frater n.2 1,  friar n. 2a. ΘΚΠ society > faith > church government > monasticism > monk > 			[noun]		 monkeOE brotherOE claustermanc1175 man (woman, etc.) of religiona1200 cloister-monkc1325 friarc1330 son1416 religion manc1475 pater1481 abbey man1483 scapularc1540 monach?c1550 cloister-man1581 monastic1632 cowlist1637 religieux?a1649 religioso1708 saint1888 society > faith > church government > monasticism > monk > 			[noun]		 > fellow brotherOE commoigne1425 OE    Ælfric Catholic Homilies: 1st Ser. 		(Royal)	 		(1997)	 xxxv. 483  				Sum broþer gecyrde to anum mynstre þe he sylf gestaþelode. c1175    Ormulum 		(Burchfield transcript)	 l. 6367  				Himm birrþ beon..god wiþþ hise breþre. 1340    Ayenbite 		(1866)	 262  				Þis boc is uolueld..of ane broþer of þe cloystre of sanynt austin of Canterberi. a1425    Rule St. Benet 		(Lansd.)	 		(1902)	 21 (MED)  				Yef any sistir ouþir broþir of þordir..comun wid hir, [etc.]. a1513    H. Bradshaw Lyfe St. Werburge 		(1521)	  i. xxi. sig. h.i  				This kynge gaue a place..To buylde a monastery, to relygyous brethur. ?1518    Cocke Lorelles Bote sig. B.iiijv  				The pope..hath graunted in his byll That euery brother may do what he wyll. 1535–6    Act 27 Henry VIII c. 42 in  Statutes of Realm 		(1963)	 III. 600  				Scolers Dimies Brotherne Chapleynes. a1616    W. Shakespeare Measure for Measure 		(1623)	  iii. i. 477  				I am a brother Of gracious Order, late come from the Sea, In speciall businesse from his  Holinesse.       View more context for this quotation 1659    F. Howgill Mistery Babylon 12  				If any refuse to give us a Tythe-cock of hay..we can pull down the hedges, and break open the gates.., as many of our reverend Brethren of our order have lately done. 1721    R. Keith in  tr.  Thomas à Kempis Select Pieces II. To Rdr. p. vii  				The pious Author having been a Monastick or Brother of the Order of St. Augustine. 1798    tr.  A. Barruel Mem. Hist. Jacobinism IV. ii. 79  				All the scientific journals are procured for the brethren at the expence of the Order. 1819    W. Scott Ivanhoe 		(1820)	 III. vi. 139  				Albert had received within a house of religion the Jewish captive, and..the paramour of a brother of the Order. 1898    A. M. Y. Baylay tr.  P. H. Batiffol Hist. Rom. Breviary iv. 194  				The Italian abbey of Fons Avellanus, founded in 1019..as a Benedictine community, the brethren being, however, as much hermits as monks. 1902    Daily Chron. 2 Sept. 5/6  				The murderer was a tertiary lay brother of the Dominican order. 1980    B. MacLaverty Lamb 		(1981)	 iii. 23  				I once knew a young Brother who fancied himself as a calligrapher. 2011    W. P. Jones Different Kind of Cell viii. 105  				Br. Clayton and the brothers of the abbey enjoy a particular spiritual bond.  b.  As a prefix to the first name of a male member of a religious order; abbreviated Br. Also as a form of address. ΚΠ eOE    tr.  Bede Eccl. Hist. 		(Tanner)	  v. xiii. 436  				Hwæt þæt is wundor, broðor Dryhthelm [L. frater Drycthelme]—wæs ðæt þæs weres nama. OE    Wærferð tr.  Gregory Dialogues 		(Corpus Cambr.)	 		(1900)	  ii. vii. 115  				Se drihtnes wer..cigde Maurum þone munuc & þus cwæð: ‘broþor Maurus! yrn hraðe.’ a1387    J. Trevisa tr.  R. Higden Polychron. 		(St. John's Cambr.)	 		(1869)	 II. 77  				Broþer Ranulf, monk of Chestre, compiled and made þis presente cronicle. c1525    Rule St. Francis in  J. S. Brewer  & R. Howlett Monumenta Franciscana 		(1882)	 II. 65 (MED)  				To his welbeloued sonnys Brother Fraunces and to alle other brotherne of the order of the bretherne mynorrys. 1550    W. Lynne tr.  J. Funke Actes & Hist. Worlde 1532–50 in  tr.  J. Carion Thre Bks. Cronicles f. ccxxxvv  				A Monke, called Brother George Ordinis paulinor at Offen. 1663    A. Cowley Cutter of Coleman-St.  iv. v. 46  				Brother Abednego, will you not pronounce this Evening tide before the Congregation of the Spotless in Coleman-street? 1707    W. Nicolson Diary 9 Mar. in  London Diaries 		(1985)	 423  				After Ordination-Sermon at St Paul's..at Dinner with Brother Joseph. 1873    H. W. Longfellow Monk Casal-Maggiore in  Aftermath  i. 69  				Brother Anthony..Drove him [sc. the ass] before him. 1897    Harper's Weekly 6 Nov. 1102/3  				The Abbot..said slowly, ‘Brother Ambrose, on such a night as this, after the manner of men, I fight with beasts at Ephesus.’ 1933    H. Allen Anthony Adverse II.  vi. xxxviii. 566  				From the forward deck of the Ariostatica came the voice of Brother François saying the office for the dead. 1980    B. MacLaverty Lamb 		(1981)	 i. 8  				I've decided once and for all to catalogue my books. You don't have much call for them do you, Brother? 2007    School Libr. Jrnl. 		(Nexis)	 June 159  				A self-serving monk named Brother Rohan.  c.  In plural. Used in the names of various men's religious orders, as  Brethren of Alexius,  Brethren of the Common Life,  Brethren of the Community,  Brethren of the Holy Trinity,  Brethren of the Sack,  Brothers of Charity, etc. Also (in singular): a member of one of these orders.See also Christian Brothers n. ΚΠ 1655    T. Fuller Church-hist. Brit.  vi. 275  				Speaking of the coming in of the Brethren of the Sack, as also of the Order of Bethlemites, he welcomes them. 1691    A. Wood Athenæ Oxonienses I. 561  				He was a benefactor to the said Vicars, by giving them the Lands which belonged to the Brethren of the Holy Trinity at Totness in Devonshire. 1691    T. Southerne Sir Anthony Love  i. 5  				A Brokeing brother of Bethlehem, With all his Frippery about him! 1706    tr.  L. E. Du Pin New Eccl. Hist. 16th Cent. II.  iv. xi. 450  				The Brothers of Charity were instituted by St. John de Dieu. 1765    A. Maclaine tr.  J. L. von Mosheim Eccl. Hist. I.  ii. 744  				The famous sect of the Cellite brethren and sisters arose at Antwerp; they were also styled the Alexian brethren and sisters, because St. Alexius was their patron. 1800    T. Haweis Impartial Hist. Church of Christ II. 296  				The one bore the name of conventual brethren, the other, brethren of observation. 1834    T. A. Trollope Encycl. Ecclesiastica I. 567  				Those who insisted upon the mitigation of the austere injunctions of their founder, were called the Brethren of the Community. 1839    J. Murdock tr.  J. L. von Mosheim Inst. Eccl. Hist. II.  iii. ii. ii. 317  				The..Fratres parvi (Little Brethren), or Fraterculi de paupere vita (Little Brothers of the poor life), were Franciscan monks..who wished to observe the regulations prescribed by their founder St. Francis more perfectly. 1860    A. Edersheim tr.  J. H. Kurtz Hist. Christian Church I. §142. 457  				The Brethren of the Common Life were an association of pious clergymen founded by Gerhard Groot at Deventer in the Netherlands (1384). 1879    Cassell's Encycl. Dict. I.  i. 694/1  				Brethren of Alexius:..a sect in the fourteenth century, the same as Cellites. 1938    E. Goudge Towers in Mist 		(1998)	 iv. 92  				The Carmelites, the Brothers of the Sack and the Crossed Friars soon became..familiar figures. 1996    C. Lindberg European Reformations iii. 57  				Luther went to Magdeburg, where he lived and studied at a school run by a pious lay religious organization, the Brethren of the Common Life. 2001    Eng. Hist. Rev. 116 1249  				The Humiliati outlived the Brothers of the Sack, the Jesuates and other failed experiments in medieval utopian communitarianism.  IV.  Figurative senses referring to a thing.  10.  A thing perceived as resembling, or having a close connection to, another or others. Frequently with †to or of, and with preceding qualifying adjective, as big brother of, elder brother of, etc.In quot. OE   as part of a riddle (describing an antler) using anthropomorphic imagery; gingran broþor (‘younger brothers’) refers to a newly grown pair of antlers ousting the pair of the previous year. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > relationship > 			[noun]		 > that which is related or has affinity brotherOE cousina1398 relativea1475 sistera1500 cousin-germanc1547 yokefellow1547 ally1566 affinitive1579 twin1592 conjugate1605 sympathizant1620 relatist1640 first cousin1670 family likeness1759 family resemblance1785 the world > relative properties > relationship > similarity > 			[adjective]		 > another or fellow brotherOE another1556 OE    Riddle 88 17  				Nu unc mæran twam magas uncre sculon æfter cuman, eard oðþringan gingran broþor. lOE    Metrical Charm: Against Wen 		(Royal 4 A.xiv)	 4  				Wenne.., þu scealt..to þan nihgan berhge, þer þu hauest, ermig, enne broþer. c1330						 (?c1300)						    Speculum Guy 		(Auch.)	 		(1898)	 l. 121 (MED)  				Accedie is as sleuþes broþer, Wicke on and wicke oþer. c1405						 (c1395)						    G. Chaucer Canon's Yeoman's Tale 		(Ellesmere)	 		(1875)	 l. 1439  				The dragon..dyeth nat but if that he be slayn With his brother..By the dragon Mercurie..He vnderstood, and Brymstoon by his brother That out of sol and Luna were ydrawe. ?a1425    tr.  Guy de Chauliac Grande Chirurgie 		(N.Y. Acad. Med.)	 f. 18v (MED)  				Atuix it [sc. matrice] & þe pappez bene co[n]tinued..mylken veynez & menstrualez; Wherfor..Ipocras seid milke to be broþer to menstruez. a1475						 (a1376)						    W. Langland Piers Plowman 		(Harl. 875)	 		(1867)	 A.  ii. l. 141 (MED)  				Feire speche þat is feiþles is falsnes broþer. 1658    Sir T. Browne Hydriotaphia: Urne-buriall v. 77  				Since the brother of death daily haunts us with dying memento's. 1693    Leo of St Mary Magdalen Pious Instr. 94  				Besides this Vice, there is another, Which equally breaks this Command: Blasphemous Cursing is its brother. 1770    A. Young Expediency Free Exportation of Corn 17  				Whoever will take the pains to read all that has been written against Exportation, will find every argument knocking down its brother. 1802    W. Wordsworth in  W. Wordsworth  & S. T. Coleridge Lyrical Ballads 		(ed. 2)	 II. 124  				That April morn, Of this the very brother. 1830    Ld. Tennyson Isabel in  Poems 8  				A clear stream flowing with a muddy one, Till in its onward current it absorbs..The vexéd eddies of its wayward brother. 1911    Polit. Sci. Q. 26 164  				In the United States, the telephone has grown to be the big brother of the telegraph. 1978    J. A. Maxwell America's Fascinating Indian Heritage iii. 97/2  				The stickball game the Southeastern tribesmen aptly called the little brother of war. 2010    R. Livingstone tr.  U. Beck God of one's Own i. 16  				Doubt, the brother of faith whose narratives thread their way through the history of religion.  11.  Any of the five sepals of the calyx (calyx n. 1a) of certain roses, esp. the dog rose. Chiefly in  five brothers (of the rose) and variants, with reference to a riddle (see note and e.g. quot. 1876).				 [In later use translating or referring to a post-classical Latin riddle (1732 or earlier; see quots. a1807, 1876   for examples of English versions) which was based on a much earlier verse recorded in a printed edition (1521) of the  Repertorium morale of Pierre Bersuire (c1290–1362): Fratres sunt quinque: medius partitur vtrinque: Sunt duo barbati, sine barba sunt duo nati ‘There are five brothers: the middle one is shared on both sides. Two are bearded, two were born without beards’. The verse is sometimes attributed to Albertus Magnus, who first described the structure of the calyx of the rose, but it is not included in his description.]			 ΘΚΠ the world > plants > part of plant > reproductive part(s) > flower or part containing reproductive organs > 			[noun]		 > parts of > calyx > sepal(s) five brothers (of the rose)1578 supporter1626 impaler1672 pale1682 leaflet1785 sepal1829 1578    H. Lyte tr.  R. Dodoens Niewe Herball  vi. i. 655  				The fiue litle leaues whiche stande rounde about the bud, or the beginning of Roses, are called in Latine, Cortices Rosarum..: some do also cal them, the fiue brothers of the Roses, wherof, as is beforesayd, two haue beardes, and two haue none, and the fifth hath but halfe a one. 1626    F. Bacon Sylua Syluarum §590  				We see also, that the Sockets, and Supporters of Flowers, are Figured; As in the Fiue Brethren of the Rose; Sockets of Gillyflowers, &c. 1658    Sir T. Browne Garden of Cyrus iii, in  Hydriotaphia: Urne-buriall 140  				But nothing is more admired then the five Brethren of the Rose, and the strange disposure of the Appendices or Beards, in the calicular leaves thereof. a1807    Britannic Mag. 10 47/1  				Five brothers at one birth a beauty bore; Two had good beards, two other no beards wore; But strange indeed was the fifth brother's case, Whose beard grew but on one side of his face. 1876    All Year Round 16 Dec. 320/2  				Any one ignorant..of the singular structure of a rosebud, with its calyx of narrow leaves, would try in vain to solve the following: Five brothers there are, Born at once of their mother; Two bearded, two bare, The fifth neither one nor the other. 1965    W. T. Stearn in  Huntia 2 181  				The five brothers are, in short, the five sepals of Rosa canina and other dog-roses. 1999    P. Bernhardt Rose's Kiss i. 13  				Two sepals will have edges that break up into tiny, flattened ‘whiskers’. They are the bearded brothers... The brother with only half a beard has one smooth edge and one whiskery edge.  B. int. colloquial (chiefly North American).   Expressing surprise, excitement, appreciation, disbelief, etc., or used to give emphasis to a following statement. Frequently in  oh brother! ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > expectation > surprise, unexpectedness > exclamation of surprise			[interjection]		 whatOE well, wellOE avoyc1300 ouc1300 ay1340 lorda1393 ahaa1400 hillaa1400 whannowc1450 wow1513 why?1520 heydaya1529 ah1538 ah me!a1547 fore me!a1547 o me!a1547 what the (also a) goodyear1570 precious coals1576 Lord have mercy (on us)1581 good heavens1588 whau1589 coads1590 ay me!1591 my stars!a1593 Gods me1595 law1598 Godso1600 to go out1600 coads-nigs1608 for mercy!a1616 good stars!1615 mercy on us (also me, etc.)!a1616 gramercy1617 goodness1623 what next?1662 mon Dieu1665 heugh1668 criminy1681 Lawd1696 the dickens1697 (God, etc.) bless my heart1704 alackaday1705 (for) mercy's sake!1707 my1707 deuce1710 gracious1712 goodly and gracious1713 my word1722 my stars and garters!1758 lawka1774 losha1779 Lord bless me (also you, us, etc.)1784 great guns!1795 mein Gott1795 Dear me!1805 fancy1813 well, I'm sure!1815 massy1817 Dear, dear!1818 to get off1818 laws1824 Mamma mia1824 by crikey1826 wisha1826 alleleu1829 crackey1830 Madonna mia1830 indeed1834 to go on1835 snakes1839 Jerusalem1840 sapristi1840 oh my days1841 tear and ages1841 what (why, etc.) in time?1844 sakes alive!1846 gee willikers1847 to get away1847 well, to be sure!1847 gee1851 Great Scott1852 holy mackerel!1855 doggone1857 lawsy1868 my wig(s)!1871 gee whiz1872 crimes1874 yoicks1881 Christmas1882 hully gee1895 'ullo1895 my hat!1899 good (also great) grief!1900 strike me pink!1902 oo-er1909 what do you know?1909 cripes1910 coo1911 zowiec1913 can you tie that?1918 hot diggety1924 yeow1924 ziggety1924 stone (or stiffen) the crows1930 hullo1931 tiens1932 whammo1932 po po po1936 how about that?1939 hallo1942 brother1945 tie that!1948 surprise1953 wowee1963 yikes1971 never1974 to sod off1976 whee1978 mercy1986 yipes1989 1945    Life 3 Sept. 4  				Oh, brother!! What a gal is Gail Sullivan! 1953    Manch. Guardian Weekly 20 Aug. 7  				Never did learn to spell it. But, brother, I drank it. 1969    Islander 		(Victoria, Brit. Columbia)	 9 Nov. 6/3  				Then when you think you've got used to mountain roads you hit one like the Seton–Darcy road. Oh Brother! 1985    Toronto Sun 10 Oct. 42/1  				And brother, when Elsie decides to ‘bake’ her..Cheese Cake it's a doozy of a winner. 2004    S. Hall Electric Michelangelo 159  				I ain't saying forty-three is old, but oh brother is he a slugger. Phrases P1.    brother in arms and variants: a soldier, knight, etc., considered in relation to another or others, as combatants on the same side, or for the same cause; a fellow soldier, knight, etc. Also figurative.				 [Compare post-classical Latin frater in armis (1461 in a British source).]			 ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > warrior > soldier > 			[noun]		 > fellow-soldier gadlingOE sword-brotherc1275 companionc1325 companion-in-arms1525 fellow soldier1526 commilitant1577 camarada1598 fore-fellows1598 commilitoa1614 brother in arms1632 comrade-in-arms1848 1485    W. Caxton tr.  Paris & Vienne 		(1957)	 2  				Two brethern of armes. [No corresponding passage in the French original.] 1632    P. Massinger Maid of Honour  v. ii. sig. L4v  				Once more brothers in armes. 1685    E. Philipps Minority St. Lewis 54  				He entred into the Earl of Boulogne's Party, and drew along with him his Brother of Arms, Hugo de Dampmartin. 1828    W. Scott Fair Maid of Perth vii, in  Chron. Canongate 2nd Ser. II. 212  				That doughty burgher is Henry's brother-at-arms. 1828    P. F. Tytler Hist. Scotl. I. iv. 377  				His friend and brother in arms, the illustrious Randolph. 1840    Fraser's Mag. 21 315  				The two knights defend each other, as sworn brethren-at-arms. 1918    N.Y. Med. Jrnl. 6 Apr. 658/1  				The danger of our boys carrying the virus of gum chewing to their brothers in arms of other nations and customs. 1945    Billboard 3 Nov. 70/2  				Let's all do a good job now and help every one of these men back to normal life... We owe all that we have today to them and their brothers-at-arms. 2011    Daily Tel. 18 July 18/4  				The Chelsea Pensioners..and their dead brothers-in-arms commemorated by the Cenotaph, fought for his freedom to protest.  P2.    to be one's brother's keeper and variants: to be responsible or concerned for the welfare of a relative, friend, or people in general. With allusion to Genesis 4:9, in which Cain responds to God when asked the whereabouts of the murdered Abel, ‘Am I my brother's keeper?’ (see, e.g., quots. a1382   and 1530). ΚΠ a1382    Bible 		(Wycliffite, E.V.)	 		(Bodl. 959)	 		(1959)	 Gen. iv. 9  				Caym..answerde: ‘I wote neuer wheþer am I þe keper of my broþer?’ 1530    Bible 		(Tyndale)	 Gen. iv. f. vv  				And ye Lorde sayd vnto Cain: where is Abell thy brother: And he sayd: I can not tell, am I my brothers keper?]			 1612    T. Taylor Αρχὴν Ἁπάντων: Comm. Epist. Paul to Titus (iii. 12) 728  				Now with what ioy can he giue vp his accounts, who with the hireling hath left his people to the wolfe..he is none of his brothers keeper. 1693    E. Pelling Pract. Disc. Charity viii. 156  				This is Christian Charity indeed, to become ones Brother's Keeper. 1743    W. Allen Serm. at Assizes Kingston upon Thames 8  				For in this Sense every Man is properly his Brother's Keeper. 1837    Western Messenger Oct. 86  				Man in the hours of long continued prosperity, self-confident, self-devoted, self-indulged—forgets that he is his brother's keeper. 1913    Rotarian Sept. 22  				The business man of a generation ago was wont to exclaim, ‘Am I my brother's keeper?’ confident that this rhetorical inquiry was a complete answer to the call of duty; to-day, the expression has lost its interrogatory form, and men have come to say, ‘I am my brother's keeper.’ 1972    M. Shadbolt Strangers & Journeys viii. 113  				I am obviously not my brother's keeper. I cannot be expected to account for him. 1991    U.S. News & World Rep. 27 May 11/2  				The selfishness of an isolationist ‘peace’ movement is diametrically opposed to the classic liberal belief that we are our brother's keeper.  P3.    brother of the angle: a (fellow) angler. ΚΠ 1653    I. Walton Compl. Angler i. 5  				I am a Brother of the Angle .       View more context for this quotation 1696    J. Smith True Art Angling (title page)  				By J. S. Gent. A Brother of the Angle. 1831    Spirit of Times 		(N.Y.)	 10 Dec. 4/4  				For the information of brothers of the angle.., I am induced to make the following extracts from some hasty notes..on my return from several trout fishing excursions in this neighbourhood. 1883    Builder 21 July 68/3  				While very young [he] became an ardent brother of the angle. 1908    D. H. M. Read Highways & Byways in Hampshire xiv. 226  				The peaceful water meadows are connected with brothers of the angle and their gentle art. 2009    Public Opinion 		(Chambersburg, Pa.)	 		(Nexis)	 6 Mar.  				I have one friendship that began with casual conversation in the fly shop that has evolved into dozens of road trips. Kindred spirits are we brothers of the angle.  P4.   historical.  Brethren of the Free Spirit (also  Brothers of the Free Spirit): a 13th–14th cent. Western European Christian movement whose members believed that perfect union with God freed the individual from the need to observe conventional moral norms.				 [After post-classical Latin fratres liberi spiritus (c1318 in a bull of Pope John XXII, or earlier).]			 ΘΚΠ society > faith > sect > Christianity > other sects and movements > Brethren > 			[noun]		 Brethren of the Free Spirit1765 1765    A. Maclaine tr.  J. L. Mosheim Eccles. Hist. I.  iii. 757  				The death of this person was highly detrimental to the affairs of the Brethren of the free spirit. 1879    Leisure Hour 15 Feb. 108/1  				There was mutiny in the very camp of the Papacy. The Fratricelli as a separatist branch of the Franciscan Order in Italy and Spain; the ‘Brothers of the Free Spirit’, a body accused of Pantheistic and Communistic tendencies in Germany and Flanders. 1899    A. H. Newman Man. Church Hist. 		(1900)	 I.  iv. iii. 557  				The Brethren of the Free Spirit are not accurately distinguished in mediæval writings from the Amalricians and the Beghards. 1967    H. Kaminsky Hist. Hussite Revol. vii. 352  				The Brethren of the Free Spirit..constituted the form of Joachitism most likely to have influenced the Hussites. 2014    M. Tausiet in  T. G. Fehler et al.  Relig. Diaspora in Early Mod. Europe viii. 110  				The so-called ‘Brethren of the Free Spirit’, a supposed sect with a presence in Flanders and the Rhineland.  P5.    a man and (a) brother: a person considered as a fellow member of the human race and thus deserving of equal rights; cf. man-and-brotherism n.The motto ‘Am I not a man and a brother?’ originally appeared on the seal of the Society for the Abolition of the Slave Trade under a depiction of a kneeling slave in chains. The design was approved by a Committee of the Society on 16 October 1787 and was later used on a cameo medallion, black on white, produced by Josiah Wedgwood, which became extremely popular as a personal ornament. ΚΠ 1787    Fair Minute Bks. Comm. Abolition Slave-trade I. 		(BL MS Add. 21254)	 16 Oct. f. 16v  				Joseph Woods..on the Subject of a Seal for this Committee brought in a Specimen of a Design for the same, expressive of an African in Chains in a supplicating Posture with this Motto ‘Am I not a Man & a Brother’. 1835    J. Montgomery Songs on Abolition of Negro Slavery in  Wesleyan-Methodist Mag. May 399/2  				The Negro wakes to liberty..Read the great charter on his brow, ‘I am a man, a brother now.’ 1874    J. Ruskin Fors Clavigera IV. xxxviii. 39  				With all the liberality of republican Europe rejoicing in his dignities as a man and a brother. 1923    Elevator Constructor Apr. (verso front cover)  				If you treat him fair, like a Man and a Brother, He isn't any Problem, at all! 1965    Negro Digest Oct. 11/1  				Am I not a soldier, a man and a brother? Not if you are black, America answered. 2011    C. J. Trotman Frederick Douglass iv. 82  				He..judged it [sc. the Liberty Party] to be exactly in the right place, at the right time, and with the right moral tone, which to Frederick meant that they saw the slave as both a man and a brother.  P6.   U.S. slang (chiefly in African-American usage).  brother from another mother: a very close male friend. See also sister from another mister n. at sister n. Phrases 5. ΚΠ 1989    B. M. Hamlin Beware Mushroom Man (verso title page)  				For my brother from another mother: Andrew Jones. 1998    Sun Sentinel 		(Fort Lauderdale, Florida)	 		(Electronic ed.)	 16 Oct.  				The album is the third released by Fat Joe and by far the best. Aided by his brother from another mother, Big Punisher, and the rest of the Terror Squad. 2001    N.Y. Times 23 Dec.  b6  				He used to introduce me as his brother from another mother. I was proud of that. 2007    N.Y. Mag. 11 June 75/1  				‘Brother from another mother’ is how the heroin-addicted surfer Butchie Yost..describes John. 2012    Victorville 		(Calif.)	 Daily Press 6 Oct. 82/2  				Randy has many people who consider him their good friend, but none so close as Mike..who called him ‘his brother from another mother’. Compounds C1.    a.   Appositive, chiefly with the sense ‘fellow’.  (a)   With plural forms with -n, as brethren (cf. ζ.  forms). ΚΠ c1443    R. Pecock Reule of Crysten Religioun 		(1927)	 456 (MED)  				Neiþer hise owne briþeren apostlis token such ensaumple of hym at þat tyme. 1504    Rolls of Parl.: Henry VII 		(Electronic ed.)	 Parl. Jan. 1504 §29. m. 23  				The mayre..wyth his brethern aldermen. 1670    I. Walton Life R. Hooker 96 in  Lives  				His Brethren Ministers of the Low Countreys. 1703    L. Smith Evid. Things not Seen 		(ed. 2)	 77  				By we in the first cited Text, St. Paul means the Souls of him and his Brethren Believers. 1820    J. Keats Hyperion: a Fragm.  ii, in  Lamia & Other Poems 176  				Tell me, all ye brethren Gods, How we can war. 1911    Jrnl. Presbyterian Hist. Soc. Sept. 76  				It is a very proper thing that Baptists should join with their brethren Protestants. 2000    B. Horn  & M. Wyczynski in  B. Horn  & S. J. Harris Warrior Chiefs 		(2001)	 vii. 146  				His attempts at ‘contributing’ were not welcomed by many of his brethren officers.  (b)   With singular form. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > social relations > association, fellowship, or companionship > a companion or associate > 			[adjective]		 fellow1550 companiona1593 brother1593 1593    T. Bell Motives Romish Faith  ii. viii. 106  				What holy amitie is betweene the Iesuite Mushe, and other seminarie-priestes..his brother priestes will witnesse with me. 1603    T. Dekker et al.  Patient Grissill sig. C  				Manie of his brother knights. a1616    W. Shakespeare Henry V 		(1623)	  i. ii. 122  				Your Brother Kings and Monarchs of the  Earth.       View more context for this quotation 1694    J. Locke Ess. Humane Understanding 		(new ed.)	  ii. xxvii. 186  				To punish one Twin for what his Brother-Twin did. 1725    W. Broome in  A. Pope et al.  tr.  Homer Odyssey III.  xi. 300  				Two brother heroes shall from thee be born. 1730    D. Lewis et al.  Misc. Poems 285  				Thee who shall praise? Except by Sirius, or his Brother Star Haply inspir'd? 1793    R. Burns Poems 		(ed. 2)	 II. 219  				Land o' Cakes, and brither Scots. 1837    B. Disraeli Venetia I. 158  				An esteemed neighbour and a brother magistrate. 1844    Chambers's Edinb. Jrnl. 16 Nov. 316/2  				All kinds of information..about the proceedings of his brother Russians absent from their country like himself. 1869    C. Boutell tr.  J. P. Lacombe Arms & Armour ii. 17  				The substitution..of iron, in the stead of its elder brother-metal, bronze. 1951    Sport 7 Jan. 10/1  				Usually brother-professionals can get a quick idea of his style of play by the way he moves. 2013    Daily Tel. 		(Nexis)	 13 July 27  				A brother officer in the jeep ahead of him was killed by a landmine.  b.   General attributive and objective.   brother-hater  n. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > hatred > 			[noun]		 > one who hates > one who hates his brother brother-hater1632 1632    J. Vicars tr.  Virgil XII Aeneids  vi. 175  				Here brother-haters whiles they liv'd, I saw; Parents despisers, cheaters of just law. 1817    S. T. Coleridge Blessed are ye that Sow 11  				Of many and various sorts are the brother-haters. 2005    Philadelphia Inquirer 		(Nexis)	 11 Nov.  w4  				Walter..age 10, is a baseball lover and a brother hater. In his eyes, little bro Danny is no fun.   brother slaughter  n.				 [compare Old English brōþorsliht   (compare sleight n.2)]			 ΘΚΠ the world > life > death > killing > killing of type of person > 			[noun]		 > of relative > of brother brother slaughterc1480 fratricide1569 c1480						 (a1400)						    St. Paul l. 457 in  W. M. Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc. Dial. 		(1896)	 I. 42  				Þai..throw browthir slawchtir can þe file. 1561    T. Norton tr.  J. Calvin Inst. Christian Relig. iv. f. 11  				Did brotherslaughter seme to the Patriarches a lawfull thyng? 1999    W. E. McDonald Thomas Mann's Joseph & his Brothers ii. 68  				Eliphaz..may..break the pattern of brother slaughter that would make Esau forever Cain.   brother-slayer  n.				 [originally after classical Latin frātricīda fratricide n.1; compare Old English brōþorslaga, Old High German bruodersleggo]			 ΘΚΠ the world > life > death > killing > killer for specific reason or type of person > 			[noun]		 > of relatives > of brother fratricidec1450 brother-slayer?c1475 ?c1475    Catholicon Anglicum 		(BL Add. 15562)	 f. 19  				A Brodyr slaer, fratricida. 1872    Ld. Tennyson Last Tournament in  Gareth & Lynette 94  				The skeleton of a brother-slayer. 2008    Daily Star 		(Nexis)	 26 Apr. 2  				Notorious patients who may be switched to jails if the strike goes ahead include..brother slayer Michael Clark.   brother worship  n. ΘΚΠ society > faith > worship > kinds of worship > 			[noun]		 > of a brother brother worship1864 1864    Chambers's Jrnl. 31 Dec. 838  				Brother-worship is natural to sisters—when young. 1991    W. R. Jacobs Francis Parkman i. 7  				That he was the object of ‘brother worship’ was not unlikely.  c.   Instrumental. ΚΠ 1676    E. Coles Eng. Dict.  				Ahitophel, Brother forsaken, he hanged himself.  C2.   Compounds with simple unmarked genitive.Compare discussion of the unmarked genitive and its relevance to compounds in the etymology.   brother bairn  n. Scottish in later use 		 (a) a brother's child, a nephew or niece;		 (b) an uncle's child, a cousin.				 [Compare Old Frisian brōtherbern.]			 ΚΠ OE    Beowulf 		(2008)	 2619  				Onela..no ymbe ða fæhðe spræc, þeah ðe he his broðor bearn abredwade. c1275						 (    Will of Wulfsige (Sawyer 1537) in  D. Whitelock Anglo-Saxon Wills 		(1930)	 74  				Habbe Stanhand alle þinge þe ic him bicueðen habbe, and mine brother bern here owen lond. 1530    Acts Lords of Council Civil Causes f. 114  				Jok Bell..his sonis, brethir, and brethir barnis. 1620    in  W. Fraser Chiefs of Grant 		(1883)	 III. 320  				To dispone the samen to thair..brether barneis. 1869    G. Hill Montgomery Manuscripts i. 100/1  				There was no one to whom the expression ‘brother bairns’ could apply, save to the children of captain Alexander Montgomery. 1936    J. Henderson in  Sc. National Dict. 		(1941)	 II. 273/3  				[Caithness] He's ma brither-bairn [i.e. uncle's son], bit a'll no heyl 'im. 1991    I. Sutherland Caithness Dict. 14  				Brither bairn, cousin. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > kinsman or relation > nephew or niece > 			[noun]		 > niece nifteOE brother daughterOE niecec1325 nephewa1513 niggie1868 OE    Ælfric Lives of Saints 		(Julius)	 		(1900)	 II. 136  				His broðor dohtor eft siððan on Myrcan wearð cwen. a1393    J. Gower Confessio Amantis 		(Fairf.)	  ii. l. 1197 (MED)  				This Lord..of hir fader themperour His brother doughter hath to wyve. ?c1475    Catholicon Anglicum 		(BL Add. 15562)	 f. 19  				A Broderson, fraternus. A Broderdoghter, fraterna. A Brodyr wiffe, fratria. 1565    Edinb. Burgh Deeds f. 162, in  Dict. Older Sc. Tongue  				Marioun Scot my brother douchter. 1688    W. Scot True Hist. Families 68  				George of Bon-raw married was, To Dowglas a Brother daughter of Cavers. a1899    D. Nicolson MS Coll. Caithness Words in  Eng. Dial. Dict.: Suppl. 		(1905)	 at Brither  				Brither-dochter, a niece. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > behaviour > good behaviour > kindness > 			[noun]		 > act of kindness > brotherly brother deeda1400 a1400						 (a1325)						    Cursor Mundi 		(Vesp.)	 l. 3750  				Fader, þis was na broþer dede.   brother son  n. Scottish in later use a brother's son; a nephew.				 [Compare Old Frisian brōthersune, Old Saxon brōtharson (Middle Low German brōdersȫne), Old High German bruodersun (Middle High German bruodersun), Old Swedish brōþorson (Swedish †broderson).]			 ΚΠ OE    Genesis A 		(1931)	 1800  				Beorn bliðemod and his broðor sunu forð oferforan folcmæro land eastan mid æhtum. a1400						 (a1325)						    Cursor Mundi 		(Vesp.)	 l. 2364  				Ta loth þi broþer sun in hand, To chanaan ȝee most now drau. a1500						 (a1400)						    Ipomedon 		(Chetham)	 		(1889)	 l. 35 (MED)  				A brother son had hee. 1642    in  D. Littlejohn Rec. Sheriff Court Aberdeenshire 		(1907)	 III. 6  				[By the present decree the former one was transferred] in the persone of the said defendar passive as air maill to the said umquhill Alexr. Irving his father's brother sone. 1748    R. Forbes tr.  Ovid Ajax his Speech 		(new ed.)	 7  				It's well kent Achilles was My father's brither sin. 1898    J. Burgess Tang 15  				Dis is a bridder-son o Willa's, sir. 1907    D. B. Nicolson in  County Caithness 66  				'Ey wir a' in ae carrywattle on ma brither-sin's shillin' hillag. 1991    K. Armstrong in  T. Hubbard New Makars 114  				Says her brither-son, in the mercat toun, Wi a smilin, three-years' bride, Affen we've axed her, wid she no come doon Tae us tae bide. ΚΠ eOE    tr.  Bede Eccl. Hist. 		(Tanner)	  i. xvi. 68  				& steopmodrum & broðorwiifum [L. cognatis] ac þæt alyfed is, þæt heo moten in gesinscipe gegadrode beon? c1175    Ormulum 		(Burchfield transcript)	 l. 19851  				Ne birrþ þe nohht tin broþerr wiff Þuss habbenn þe to wife. a1450						 (?c1421)						    J. Lydgate Siege Thebes 		(Arun.)	 		(1911)	 l. 796 (MED)  				Herodes..toke his brother 		[v.rr. brothre, brotheris, brothirs]	 wyf.  C3.     brother-and-sister adj. attributive relating to or involving a brother and sister; consisting of a brother and sister. ΚΠ 1808    H. More Cœlebs in Search of Wife II. xlii. 350  				The childish brother and sister sort of intimacy was not the most promising mode for the development of your mutual sentiments. 1846    Universalist Union 25 Apr. 382/2  				The charming Carlinde immediately appeared, led by the brother and sister pair through a secret passage of the mountain. 1910    Man 10 124  				I may mention that cases occasionally came up in the courts of brother and sister incest. 1991    N.Y. Times 3 Nov.  h26/3  				How easy it was to revile the Carpenters. In the 70's, this brother-and-sister duo went against the grain of any self-respecting rock-and-roller. 2012    N.Z. Herald 		(Nexis)	 7 Sept.  				The property was renovated by brother-and-sister team Ben Crawford, 31, and Libby, 29.   brother brush  n. a (fellow) artist; cf. brother quill n. ΚΠ 1735    S. Cobb tr.  J. de la Fontaine Saddle in  tr.  J. de la Fontaine Tales & Novels in Verse 151  				Comes Brother Brush to take a Bout So, God knows how! they rubb'd it out. but, as he was an honest Brother, Finding one gone, he drew another. 1899    Westm. Gaz. 3 May 4/1  				The celebrity of both artists—brother-brushes in the closest sense of the term. 1919    Smith's Weekly 		(Sydney)	 19 Apr. 18/1  				A certain Sydney artist received in an altercation with a brother-brush a hefty stouch on the eye. 2014    J. Ayres Art, Artisans & Apprentices ix. 155  				Rather touchingly when working for a ‘brother brush’ he offered a ten per cent discount.   brother consanguinean  n. now historical and rare a man or boy sharing a father, but not a mother, with another person; a half-brother on the father's side; cf. brother uterine n.,  brother-german n. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > kinsman or relation > sibling > brother > 			[noun]		 > half-brother > by same father brother consanguinean1731 brother-german1866 1731    A. Bayne Notes for Students Munic. Law  iii. 143  				The first Place in the Order of Succession is given to Sons; the second, to Daughters; the third, to Brothers german; the fourth, to Sisters german; the fifth, to Brothers consanguinean; the sixth, to Sisters consanguinean. 1880    J. Muirhead tr.  Gaius Institutes  iii. 177  				Brothers born of the same father, often called brothers-consanguinean, are each other's agnates. 1993    H. L. MacQueen Common Law & Feudal Society in Medieval Scotl. 174  				A brother consanguinean—that is, of the same father but another mother—could be postponed until after the death of his half-sister. ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > dwelling place or abode > a dwelling > other types of dwelling > 			[noun]		 > communal dwelling brother-house1547 phalanstery1850 familistère1865 familistery1865 longhouse1866 1547    in  J. W. Clay Testamenta Eboracensia 		(1902)	 VI. 256  				To everie one of the susters in the suster house xij d., and to everie one of the brether in the brother house xij d. 1762    P. Murdoch tr.  A. F. Büsching New Syst. Geogr. IV. 470  				The brother-house [Ger. Frater-Haus], which a Lutheran father, who is ordained, inhabits. 1883    Contemp. Rev. Oct. 491  				Their brother-houses and schools were soon found in most of the chief cities of the Netherlands.   brother-law  n.				 [shortened  <  brother-in-law n.; compare earlier father-law n.]			 = brother-in-law n.; colloquial in later use. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > kinsman or relation > sibling > brother > 			[noun]		 > brother-in-law odamOE brothera1375 brother-in-lawa1375 good-brother1487 brother-law?1583 levir1865 ?1583    tr.  A. de Bazán Relation Expongnable Attempt & Conquest Tercera sig. C4v  				Monsiur de chattres..cosin vnto the Duke of Ioyosa, & brother lawe vnto the king of Fraunce. 1676    T. Hobbes tr.  Homer Iliads xxiv. 383  				Hector, said she, Whom best I lov'd of all my Brother-laws. 1872    T. Hardy Under Greenwood Tree II.  v. i. 184  				Ye should hear Clerk Wilkins, my brother-law, tell his experiences in marrying couples these last thirty years. 2011    L. B. Pridgeon Blood-stained Victory 205  				Aunt Bernice received a phone call that her brother-law had a sudden heartache and died.   brother love  n. love for one's brother; love or fellow feeling between people; cf. brotherly love at brotherly adj. 1b. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > love > 			[noun]		 > love between kinsmen > brotherly love brotherly loveeOE brother loveOE philadelphya1677 lovey-dovey1946 OE (Northumbrian)    Liturgical Texts (Durham Ritual) in  A. H. Thompson  & U. Lindelöf Rituale Ecclesiae Dunelmensis 		(1927)	 28  				Fratres.., simus induti lorica fidei et caritatis : broð'..ue sie gigearwad byrne gileafes & broðerlufu'. c1480						 (a1400)						    St. Cecilia 412 in  W. M. Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc. Dial. 		(1896)	 II. 380  				Bruthire lufe betwene ȝou twa. 1623    W. Shakespeare  & J. Fletcher Henry VIII  v. iii. 206  				With a true heart, And Brother-loue .       View more context for this quotation 1838    J. S. Knowles Woman's Wit  v. ii. 107  				Such a brother-love, as brother never..for brother felt before! 1890    Menorah June 320  				Though aliens from our native land, Strangers in every clime, Our Brother-love doth ever show Our origin divine. 2003    A. N. LeBlanc Random Family xii. 117  				Lourdes felt that the boys' friendship fulfilled a lack of brother love. ΚΠ 1748    J. M. Scelus's Ghost 9  				But I maste haste to yonder Town,..A Brother Quill to warn. 1904    W. F. Waugh Houseboat Bk. ix. 75  				This morning we had a visit from a bright young reporter from an Alton paper... The first brother quill we had met.   brother–sister adj. attributive relating to or involving a brother and sister; consisting of a brother and sister. ΚΠ 1897    K. Pearson Chances of Death II. xi. 104  				I cannot now enter upon the causes which led to the termination of the brother-sister sexual relation. 1910    Amer. Jrnl. Psychol. 21 108  				The characteristics that constitute the Father-daughter complex are found in a similar one, the Brother-sister complex. 1997    Village Voice 		(N.Y.)	 27 May 125/4  				Stephanie Childs..is the sister of Knicks guard Chris Childs. Might they make the first brother-sister act in professional basketball?   brother uterine  n.				 [after post-classical Latin frater uterinus (Vulgate; also uterinus frater)]			 a man or boy sharing a mother, but not a father, with another person; a half-brother on the mother's side; cf. brother consanguinean n.,  brother-german n. ΚΠ ?a1475						 (?a1425)						    tr.  R. Higden Polychron. 		(Harl. 2261)	 		(1874)	 V. 295 (MED)  				Medardus the confessor, and Gildardus byschop Rotomagense, were in this tyme, bothe breþer uteryne, borne in oon day. 1605    G. Buck Daphnis Polystephanos sig. A4  				Hee had Edmond creaeted Earle of Richmond by King Henry the sixt, his brother vterine. 1764    R. Douglas Peerage Scotl. 55/1  				John earl of Athole, brother uterine to King James II. 1887    Lucifer 15 Nov. 220  				The lads who were not brothers uterine were made brothers of the Totem at what was termed the festival of young-man-making. 1993    H. L. MacQueen Common Law & Feudal Society in Medieval Scotl. ix. 262  				Emma of Smeaton had a brother Nicholas, who might be expected to have had a better claim than she did to the lands unless he was a brother-uterine. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2016; most recently modified version published online June 2022). brotherv. 1.  transitive. Originally and chiefly Scottish. To make a brother of (in various senses of the noun); spec. to admit (a person) into a brotherhood (brotherhood n. 1a). Frequently with in, into, specifying the brotherhood. Now somewhat rare. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > social relations > an association, society, or organization > types of association, society, or organization > 			[verb (transitive)]		 > admit to brotherhood brother1428 society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > kinsman or relation > sibling > brother > relationship of brothers > be brother to			[verb (transitive)]		 > treat as or call brother brother1428 be-brother1881 society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > kinsman or relation > sibling > brother > relationship of brothers > be brother to			[verb (transitive)]		 > make a brother of brother1819 1428    in  C. Innes  & P. Chalmers Liber S. Thome de Aberbrothoc 		(1856)	 II. 59  				It is accordit alsua that the said John Vernour sal be brothiryt in the forsaid abbay. 1573    Sege Edinb. Cast. in  J. G. Dalyell Scotish Poems 16th Cent. 		(1801)	 II. 289  				Thay ar bowit and bruderit in our band. 1685    Extracts Rec. in  W. Chambers Charters Burgh Peebles 		(1872)	 116  				The magistrats..discharges any of the saids wrights and masons..to brother any prenteise till he be yeir and day att the trade. 1789    Times 8 Dec. 2  				The question was,—whether Freemen might be admitted into that Borough without having passed through the form of being brothered into one of the eight Guilds of the City. 1819    W. Scott Ivanhoe II. xiii. 240  				This same motley gentleman thou art so fond to brother. a1849    T. L. Beddoes Second Brother  ii. ii, in  Poems 		(1851)	 I. 34  				Marcello is my brother; I am his; If coming of one mother brother us. 1887    J. Taylor Curling 		(ed. 2)	 386  				Gin they brither'd weemen fo'k, An' ye were ane, I vow, This day I'd tae'n my rifle, Meg, An' no my curlin' kowe. 1987    J. O'Neill in  D. P. Verene Vico & Joyce  iii. 165  				Brothered by their love and hatred of their father's power and cruelty, the sons bonded together to murder him.  2.  transitive. To address (a man) as ‘brother’, esp. as a sign of affection or fellowship. ΚΠ 1587    D. Fenner Def. Godlie Ministers sig. Biv  				Howe can you brother vs thus in euerie line, and deale so vnbrotherlie with vs in euerie sentence? 1625    A. Cooke Weather-cocke of Romes Relig. 2  				In like manner, the Bishops of Constantinople vsed Damasus Bishop of Rome, Brothering him, and Colleaguing him, as they did others, to whom they writ as well as to him. 1706    G. Farquhar Recruiting Officer  i. i. 2  				No coaxing, no Brothering me, Faith. 1777    D. Garrick Bundle of Prol. in  Rev. Eng. Stud. 		(2007)	 58 487  				When we have done our Business..you may Brother me as much as you please—'till then I beg that you will address me in the Chair of the Appellation of Mr. Truncheon or Mr. President. 1841    J. Pritts Incidents of Border Life 326  				The horseman rode up, holding out his hand and calling out ‘brother! brother!’ in a tone of great affection. Kenton observes that if his gun would have made fire he would have ‘brothered’ him to his heart's content, but being totally unarmed, he called out that he would surrender. 1917    L. M. Montgomery Anne's House of Dreams xxviii. 172  				He brothered and sistered everybody. He had a large circle of relations, that man had. 2005    Afr. News 		(Nexis)	 10 May  				African leaders met, hugged, talked, brothered and sistered each other ad infinitum, sans concrete action.  3.  transitive. To be a brother to (a sibling); to act as a brother to (a person), esp. in providing care or protection. Also in  †to brother it: to act or behave as a brother (obsolete. rare). ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > kinsman or relation > sibling > brother > relationship of brothers > act as a brother			[verb (intransitive)]		 to brother it1611 society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > kinsman or relation > sibling > brother > relationship of brothers > be brother to			[verb (transitive)]		 brother1611 1611    G. Chapman tr.  Homer Iliad  xiii. 183  				She that brought thee forth, not vtterly left me Without some portion of thy spirit to make me brother thee. 1643    Ld. Herbert Let. in  Life 		(1826)	 327  				There remains now but you and I to brother it. 1748    S. Richardson Clarissa VI. lxii. 230  				That admirable Somebody..whose misfortune [is] to be brother'd and sister'd by a couple of creatures, who are not able to comprehend her excellencies. 1897    Westm. Gaz. 27 Sept. 2/1  				The experience of those who have personally shepherded, mothered, or brothered ex-prisoners is conclusive. 1913    H. MacGrath Parrot & Co. iv. 57  				A great yearning to brother her came into his heart. 1996    W. N. Herbert in  H. Ritchie New Sc. Writing 211  				Been uncled-an-auntied by thum, bullied An brithered by thum. 2008    St. Louis 		(Missouri)	 Post-Dispatch 		(Nexis)	 28 Dec.  d2  				A son who calmly brothered his siblings, who cooked family dinners..and who adventured with them on Sunday outings into the Missouri woods. Derivatives  ˈbrothering  n. 		 (a) the action of admitting a tradesman, apprentice, etc., into a brotherhood; a ceremony marking this; now historical;		 (b) the action of addressing a person as a ‘brother’. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > love > 			[noun]		 > love between kinsmen > brotherly love > treating or addressing as (a) brother brothering1663 1663    in  R. Renwick Extracts Rec. Burgh Peebles 		(1910)	 56  				Ane evill practicq called be them ‘brothering’. 1819    R. Southey Select. from Lett. 		(1856)	 III. 97  				By..such brothering and sistering he kept up his influence among his people. 2001    P. Aitchison Children of Sea v. 98  				Before a lad was admitted to a boat's crew at the age of ten or eleven, tradition demanded a ‘brothering’. 2009    M. E. DeMuth Daisy Chain v. 30  				The hollering people ceased to holler. The brothering and sistering stopped. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2016; most recently modified version published online December 2021). < | 
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