brain
verb
- dash out the brains of, hit hard on head
noun
- organ that serves as the center of the nervous system in all vertebrate and most invertebrate animals
- animal brain as food
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ˈbɹeɪ̯n/ / /ˈbɹæ̝ɪ̯n/ / /ˈbɾen/
name
Etymology: From the Irish and Scottish Gaelic surname, from mac an Bhreitheamhan (“son of the judge”), from breitheamh (“judge”).
- A surname.
noun
Etymology: Etymology tree Proto-Germanic *bragną Proto-West Germanic *bragn Old English bræġn Middle English brayn English brain Inherited from Middle English brayn, from Old English bræġn, from Proto-West Germanic *bragn, from Proto-Germanic *bragną. Cognate with Scots braine, brane (“brain”), North Frisian brayen, brein, Brain (“brain”), Saterland Frisian Brainge, Bräienge (“brain”), West Frisian brein (“brain”), Dutch brein (“brain”), Low German Brägen, Bregen (“brain”) (whence German Bregen (“animal brain”)), Ancient Greek βρεχμός (brekhmós, “front part of the skull, top of the head”).
- The control center of the central nervous system of an animal located in the skull which is responsible for perception, cognition, attention, memory, emotion, and action.
“The Ueynes are ſpred foorth throughout the whole bodie, howbeit from one welhead, that is to ſay from the Liuer: ſo be the Sinews, howbeit from the Brayne; So likewiſe are the Heartſtrings, howbeit from the Heart.”
“The brain of a calf, sheep, and pig, young and served fresh, is reputedly erotic in its effects.”
- The control center of the central nervous system of an animal located in the skull which is responsible for perception, cognition, attention, memory, emotion, and action.
“The left brain, or that which supplies and animates the right side of the body, is the most active brain, as a general rule.”
“What is expressed in the lotus, the plumed serpent, or the staff of Osiris is the yogi's knowledge of the three brains of man. The first brain is the reptilian brain of the spinal cord, the brain of instinctive reflexes, the brain of the subconscious.”
- The control center of the central nervous system of an animal located in the skull which is responsible for perception, cognition, attention, memory, emotion, and action.
“caused the young Princess, the King's only Daughter, to be taken and thrust into a large velvet Sack, and her Brains to be knockt out with great Bars”
- Mind.
“I have too much on my brain today.”
“And I should tell him all my pain, / And how my life had droop’d of late, / And he should sorrow o’er my state / And marvel what possess’d my brain; […]”
- Intellect.
“"We provided a lot of brains and a lot of heart to the response when it was needed," says Sandra Sanchez, director of AFSC's Immigrants' Voice Program in Des Moines.”
“She has a lot of brains.”
- An intelligent person.
“She was a total brain.”
“Peebee: The brains and I are comparing Remnant notes and filling in the blanks.”
- An intelligent person.
“He is the brains behind the scheme.”
- An intelligent person.
“Gerald always acts like he doesn't have a brain.”
- By analogy with a human brain, the part of a machine or computer that performs calculations.
“The computer's brain is capable of millions of calculations a second.”
- Oral sex.
“Have you ever popped champagne on a plane, while gettin' some brain?”
“You said I got brain from your dame in the range / In the passing lane / But you really ain't got no proof”
- A loose compartment of a backpack that straps on over the top opening.
verb
Etymology: Etymology tree Proto-Germanic *bragną Proto-West Germanic *bragn Old English bræġn Middle English brayn English brain Inherited from Middle English brayn, from Old English bræġn, from Proto-West Germanic *bragn, from Proto-Germanic *bragną. Cognate with Scots braine, brane (“brain”), North Frisian brayen, brein, Brain (“brain”), Saterland Frisian Brainge, Bräienge (“brain”), West Frisian brein (“brain”), Dutch brein (“brain”), Low German Brägen, Bregen (“brain”) (whence German Bregen (“animal brain”)), Ancient Greek βρεχμός (brekhmós, “front part of the skull, top of the head”).
- To dash out the brains of; to kill by smashing the skull.
- To strike (someone) on the head.
“Lambdon would require medical attention for a fractured skull. It seemed that Fen had passed his wife a couple of telling pictures, whereupon the drab Mrs. Lambdon had brained her husband with a table lamp.”
- To destroy; to put an end to.
“There thou maiſt braine him,”
“It was the ſwift celeritie of his death / […] That brain'd my purpoſe:”
- To conceive in the mind; to understand.
“'Tis still a dream, or else such stuff as madmen / Tongue, and brain not.”
- To think effectively.
“My brain isn't braining right now.”