| 释义 | 
		bray I. \ˈbrā\ verb (-ed/-ing/-s) Etymology: Middle English brayen, from Old French braire to cry, make a noise, from (assumed) Vulgar Latin bragere, of Celtic origin; akin to Middle Irish braigid he breaks wind, t-air-brech crashing noise; akin to Latin fragor crashing noise, frangere to break — more at break intransitive verb 1. obsolete  : to cry out (as in pain) 2.   a. of a donkey  : to utter a characteristic loud harsh cry  b.  : to utter a loud harsh sound resembling or suggesting that made by a donkey   < the sea lions braying and moving in the green sapphire waters — Josephine Johnson >   < cannon roared, trumpets brayed — S.E.Morison >   < the politicians wept, ranted, and brayed > transitive verb  : to utter, play, or send forth loudly, harshly, or discordantly  < a brass band braying the national anthem >  < she brayed out her grievances before the judge > II. noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English, from Old French brait, from braire 1.  : a donkey's characteristic cry 2.  : a loud or discordant noise resembling a donkey's bray  < the bray and roar of traffic > III. transitive verb (-ed/-ing/-s) Etymology: Middle English brayen, from Middle French broiier, from Old French, of Germanic origin; akin to Old High German brehhan to break — more at break 1.   a.  : to pound, crush, or grind small and fine   < bray seeds in a mortar >  b.  : to wear down as if by this process   < sorrow … had brayed her — B.A.Williams > 2.  : to spread thin  < bray printing ink > IV. noun or brey \“\ (-s)  : a heraldic representation of a brake for braying flax — called also brake, hemp-brake V.  variant of brae I |