| 释义 | brashbrash /bræʃ/ adjective    brashOrigin:1800-1900 Perhaps from  ➔ RASH1 a brash young salesman from New Yorka very brash young manThe hotel bar was full of brash, noisy journalists.
 He was loose, loudmouthed, and brash.It's not some brash statement of their own personalities, but a low murmur from many people over many years.It s brash, fast, slickly arranged big-band music that hits the accents with deft conviction.Pre, the subject of two movies this year, was brash, cocky, charismatic.Putnam, a brash type, pushed his case-a bit too hard.The cities were brash, corrupt, and the centres of organized crime.
too confident► overconfident1behaving too confidently and speaking too loudly – used to show disapproval: too sure that you will succeed or win, often when you do not have the ability to do this: · Murray worried that the team was becoming overconfident. · As drivers, teenage boys are often overconfident and take stupid risks.► cocky  informal too confident about yourself and your abilities, especially in a way that annoys other people: · a cocky young lieutenant· My brother can be a little bit cocky sometimes.· She didn't come off well in the interview - she was a bit too cocky, a bit too sure of herself.► brash  someone who is  brash  is very confident in an annoying way, for example because they talk too loudly and never listen to other people: · The hotel bar was full of brash, noisy journalists.· a brash young salesman from New York  brash journalists2a brash building, place, or object attracts attention by being very colourful, large, exciting etc:  The painting was bold, brash, and modern.—brashly adverb—brashness noun [uncountable] |