brown
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
See also: Brown
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Middle English broun, from Old English brūn (“brown; dark; dusky”), from Proto-West Germanic *brūn, from Proto-Germanic *brūnaz, from Proto-Indo-European *bʰerH-. Doublet of bruin.
cognates
- Dutch bruin
- German braun
- Ancient Greek φρύνη (phrúnē), φρῦνος (phrûnos, “toad”)
- Latin brunneus (“brown”)
- Lithuanian bė́ras (“brown”)
- Sanskrit बभ्रु (babhrú, “reddish-brown”)
- West Frisian brún
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]brown (countable and uncountable, plural browns)
- (countable and uncountable) A colour like that of chocolate or coffee.
- The browns and greens in this painting give it a nice woodsy feel.
- brown:
- (snooker, countable) One of the colour balls used in snooker, with a value of 4 points.
- (uncountable) Black tar heroin.
- (slang, archaic, countable) A copper coin.
- 1853, Charles John Chetwynd Talbot, Meliora, Or, Better Times to Come, page 247:
- I know there are many persons — some who are themselves poor — who 'never turn a beggar from their door,' but always give them a few browns (halfpence) or some scran (broken victuals).
- 1883, “The Omnibus”, in London Town[1]:
- "We've not had any breakfast,—won't you toss us down a brown?"—
That's what they call a penny in the streets of London Town.
- A brown horse or other animal.
- 1877, George Nevile, Horses and Riding, page 105:
- […] browns are the soberest, bays are the worst tempered, and chestnuts are the most foolish.
- (sometimes capitalised, countable, informal, ethnic slur) A person of Latino, Middle Eastern or South Asian descent; a brown-skinned person; someone of mulatto, or biracial appearance.
- 2005, Kristen A. Myers, Racetalk: Racism Hiding in Plain Sight:
- Many browns and blacks are immigrants — some of whom have not yet become naturalized citizens of the United States.
- (entomology) Any of various nymphalid butterflies of subfamily Satyrinae (formerly the family Satyridae).
- (entomology) Any of certain species of nymphalid butterflies of subfamily Satyrinae, such as those of the genera Heteronympha and Melanitis.
- (informal) A brown trout (Salmo trutta).
- (hunting, as "the brown") A mass of birds or animals that may be indiscriminately fired at.
- 1928, R. Pigot, Twenty-five Years Big Game Hunting, page 166:
- The temptation to have a shot into the brown was great. There was not a head there which was not a big one and the one by himself was not too easy a shot since it is always difficult to shoot when lying in soft snow.
- 1979, Kevin Andrews, Athens Alive, page 223:
- My anger mounted at this, I opened the courtyard door and raised my musket to fire into the brown; I had loaded it with small shot, and if it had gone off that would have been the death of us and the ruin of all of us in the house.
Descendants
[edit]Translations
[edit]colour
|
black tar heroin — see black tar
copper coin
|
brown-skinned person
|
nymphalid butterfly of subfamily Satyrinae
|
Salmo trutta — see brown trout
hunting: mass of birds or animals
Adjective
[edit]brown (comparative browner or more brown, superlative brownest or most brown)
- Having a brown colour.
- (obsolete) Gloomy.
- (sometimes capitalized) Of or relating to any of various ethnic groups having dark pigmentation of the skin.
- (US) Latino
- 2015 November 2 [2014], Susan Svrluga, quoting Ivonne Gonzalez, “Students accuse Yale SAE fraternity brother of saying ‘white girls only’ at party door”, in The Washington Post[2], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 03 November 2015, Grade Point[3]:
- Reminds me of the time they asked me and a group of other Latino, predominantly Mexican, friends for our passports when we tried to go to their [expletive] party a little over a year ago. […]
The saddest part is that I don’t think they understand why it’s insulting to ask a brown person for a passport.
- (of Asians) South Asian or sometimes Middle Eastern or North African
- 2021 September 9, Aasif Mandvi, quotee, “Transcript: Race in America: Giving Voice with Aasif Mandvi”, in The Washington Post[4], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 25 March 2023[5]:
- I think they sort of realized like, oh, we have Aasif who is a Muslim, an American, brown person, you know, who can sit on that fence between cultures and sort of talk about what it is--what this is from the perspective of being an insider and an outsider at the same time. […]
I think there is in the sort of South Asian, you know, psyche, a kind of adoration of Western ideals and culture that was sort of implanted into us by the British, you know, and this idea that everything that is Western is superior and better than what we have and what India--you know, what is true to our own culture.
- (of East-Eurasian ancestry) Southeast Asian
- 2020 September 25, Eric J. Daza, “How A 'Secret Asian Man' Embraced Anti-Racism”, in LAist[6], archived from the original on 23 April 2021, Essays[7]:
- I came to deeply embrace anti-racism in slow, sustained increments.
To do so, I had to embrace my own identity as a Brown person -- and understand my own complicity in white supremacy. […]
I had grown up in an entire Southeast Asian culture that had largely been groomed, indoctrinated and brainwashed into white-centered thinking over some 450 years of colonization by our Western overlords: Spain for almost 400 years, and then the United States of America for nearly 50 years more.
- (US) Latino
Descendants
[edit]Translations
[edit]having a brown colour
|
Verb
[edit]brown (third-person singular simple present browns, present participle browning, simple past and past participle browned)
- (intransitive) To become brown.
- 2006, Michael Pollan, The Omnivore's Dilemma, The Penguin Press, →ISBN, page 269:
- The chicken was browning nicely, the skin beginning to crisp and take on the toasty tones of oiled wood.
- 2019, Patricia Taxxon (lyrics and music), “Cold Water”, in Doraemon:
- Don't microwave your milk too long
It browns and bubbles over
- (cooking, transitive) To cook something until it becomes brown.
- 1887, Indian Cookery "Local" for Young Housekeepers: Second Edition, page 67:
- Pound an onion, warm a spoonful of ghee and throw in the onion, brown it slightly, add your curry stuff, brown this till it smells pleasantly, […]
- (intransitive, transitive) To tan.
- Light-skinned people tend to brown when exposed to the sun.
- (transitive) To make brown or dusky.
- Synonym: (chiefly literary and poetic) embrown
- 1807, Joel Barlow, The Columbiad:
- A trembling twilight o'er the welkin moves, / Browns the dim void and darkens deep the groves.
- (transitive) To give a bright brown colour to, as to gun barrels, by forming a thin coating of oxide on their surface.
- 1860, Andrew Ure, Ure’s Dictionary of Arts, Manufactures, and Mines[8], page 463:
- It is mixed uniformly with olive oil, and rubbed upon the iron slightly heated, which is afterwards exposed to the air, till the wished-for degree of browning is produced.
- (demography, transitive, intransitive, slang, ethnic slur, usually derogatory, offensive) To turn progressively more Hispanic or Latino, in the context of the population of a geographic region.
- the browning of America
Translations
[edit]to become brown
|
to cook until brown
|
to tan — see tan
- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
Derived terms
[edit]- anti-brown
- Arran brown
- Asian brown flycatcher (Muscicapa dauurica)
- big brown bat
- Bismarck brown
- black and brown
- Boston brown bread
- brownable
- brown adipose tissue
- brown ale
- brown alga (Phaeophyceae spp.)
- brown ammonia
- brown anole
- brown argus
- brown as a berry
- brownback
- brown bag, brown-bag
- brown-bagger
- brown bagging
- brown bag test
- brown bar
- brown bastard
- brown beaksedge
- brown bean
- brown bear
- brown bent, brown bentgrass (Agrostis canina)
- Brown Bess
- Brown Betty
- brown-bill, brownbill
- brown-billed scythebill
- brown bits
- brown bomber
- brown bottle flu
- brown box
- brown box crab
- brown bread
- brown-brown
- brown bullhead
- brown butter
- brown cheese
- brown cloud
- brown clover (Trifolium badium)
- brown coal
- Browncoat
- brown coati
- brown crab
- brown creeper
- brown dwarf
- brown earth
- browned off
- brown envelope journalism
- brown envelope syndrome
- brownette
- browneye, brown eye
- brown-eyed
- brown-eyed soul
- brown-eyed Susan
- brownface
- brown falcon
- brown fat
- brownfield
- Brown George
- brown goods
- brown goshawk
- brown-haired
- brown hairstreak
- brown hare (Lepus europaeus)
- brown hawk
- brownhead
- brown heroin
- brown holland
- brown honeyeater
- brown hyena
- brownie
- brownification
- brown inca
- brownish
- brown job
- brown joke
- brown jolly
- brown king crab
- brown kingfisher
- brown lacewing
- brown leaf
- brown leaf spot
- brown lung
- brownly
- brown marmorated stink bug
- brown mustard
- brownness
- brownnose, brown-nose, brown-noser, brown noser
- brown note
- brown ocean effect
- brown onion
- brown oriole
- brown out, brownout, brown-out
- brown owl
- brown paper
- brown paper bag party
- brown paper bag test
- brown patch
- brown pelican
- brown pound
- brown powder
- brown power
- brown priest
- brownprint
- brown rat
- brown recluse, brown recluse spider
- brown rice
- brown rot
- brown-rumped minivet
- brown sauce
- brown shark
- Brown Shirt, brown shirt, Brownshirt
- brown shoe
- brown shower
- brown shrike
- brownskin
- brown snake
- brown spar
- brown spot
- brown stew
- brown stew chicken
- brown sticker
- brownstone
- brown study
- brown sugar
- Brown Swiss
- brown-tail moth
- brown tang (Zebrasoma scopas)
- brown teal
- brown thrasher
- brown thumb
- brown tinamou
- browntop
- brown trout
- brown up
- brownware
- brownwash
- brown-water navy
- brown Windsor soup
- brown woolly monkey
- brownwort
- browny
- bush brown (Mycalesis spp., Orsotriaena spp.)
- Cappagh brown, Cappah brown
- Cassel brown
- code brown
- Colorado brown stain
- common brown cup (Peziza phyllogena)
- common brown earwig
- De Kay's brown snake
- do it brown, do it up brown
- do someone brown, done brown
- embrown
- golden brown
- great brown kingfisher
- hair-brown
- hash brown, hash-brown, hashed brown
- hash browns, hashbrowns, hash-browns, hashed browns
- Himalayan brown bear
- Hobart brown
- hot brown
- indigo brown
- Kassel brown
- king brown (Pseudechis australis)
- King Island brown thornbill
- little brown dove
- little brown fucking machine
- little brown job
- little brown jug
- Mars brown
- meadow brown (Maniola jurtina)
- Mexican brown
- mono-brown
- mousy brown
- mummy brown
- Natal brown
- nigger-brown
- nonbrown
- northern brown argus
- North Island brown kiwi
- nut-brown
- nut-brown butter
- Okarito brown kiwi
- overbrown
- plain brown wrapper
- prebrowned
- Pullman brown
- red-brown
- reddish-brown
- red-green-brown alliance
- saddle brown
- Sanford's brown
- Sanford's brown lemur
- shit-brown
- small brown crow
- Spanish brown
- stately bush brown (Bicyclus xeneas)
- sub-brown dwarf
- Sudan brown
- sunbrowned
- the quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog
- tree brown (Lethe spp.)
- unbrown
- unbrowned
- Vandyke brown
- wall brown (Lasiommata megera)
- wood brown (Lethe spp.)
Related terms
[edit]See also
[edit]Colors/Colours in English (layout · text) | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
red | orange | yellow | green | blue (incl. indigo; cyan, teal, turquoise) |
purple / violet | |
pink (including magenta) |
brown | white | gray/grey | black |
Welsh
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Adjective
[edit]brown (feminine singular brown, plural brown, equative browned, comparative brownach, superlative brownaf)
See also
[edit]gwyn | llwyd | du |
coch; rhudd | oren, melyngoch; brown | melyn; melynwyn |
melynwyrdd | gwyrdd | |
gwyrddlas; glaswyrdd | asur, gwynlas | glas |
fioled, rhuddlas; indigo | majenta; porffor | pinc, rhuddwyn |
Mutation
[edit]Categories:
- English terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- English terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *bʰerH- (brown)
- English terms inherited from Middle English
- English terms derived from Middle English
- English terms inherited from Old English
- English terms derived from Old English
- English terms inherited from Proto-West Germanic
- English terms derived from Proto-West Germanic
- English terms inherited from Proto-Germanic
- English terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- English terms inherited from Proto-Indo-European
- English doublets
- English 1-syllable words
- English terms with IPA pronunciation
- English terms with audio pronunciation
- Rhymes:English/aʊn
- Rhymes:English/aʊn/1 syllable
- English lemmas
- English nouns
- English uncountable nouns
- English countable nouns
- English terms with usage examples
- en:Snooker
- English slang
- English terms with archaic senses
- English terms with quotations
- English informal terms
- English ethnic slurs
- en:Entomology
- en:Hunting
- English adjectives
- English terms with obsolete senses
- American English
- English verbs
- English intransitive verbs
- en:Cooking
- English transitive verbs
- en:Demography
- English derogatory terms
- English offensive terms
- English terms with collocations
- en:Browns
- en:Satyrine butterflies
- en:Fire
- Welsh terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- Welsh terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *bʰerH- (brown)
- Welsh terms derived from Middle English
- Welsh terms derived from Old English
- Welsh terms derived from Proto-West Germanic
- Welsh terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- Welsh terms borrowed from English
- Welsh terms derived from English
- Welsh terms with IPA pronunciation
- Rhymes:Welsh/ou̯n
- Welsh lemmas
- Welsh adjectives