| 释义 | 
		breadth \ˈbredth, -etth, chiefly in substand speech -eth\ noun (-s) Etymology: obsolete English brede breadth (from Middle English, from Old English brǣdu, from brād broad) + -th — more at broad 1.  : distance from side to side : measure taken at right angles to length : width 2.   a.    (1)  : a piece of fabric of full width as manufactured    < a breadth of silk >   (2)  : the width in which a fabric is manufactured    < lace in 18-inch breadths >  b.  : a wide expanse   < green breadths of undulating park — George Eliot > 3.   a.  : spacious extent : embracing comprehensiveness : wideness, sweep, scope   < breadth of culture, an ease with humanism and Renaissance learning — T.S.Eliot >  b.  : freedom from narrow concentration or parochial constraint : largeness, liberality, generosity   < viewed with dispassionateness and breadth — Ruth Suckow > 4.  : the quality in works of art brought about by elimination of unnecessary detail to produce an impression of largeness and unity  < associating colors in large groups to obtain breadth > 5.  : denotation 4 |