different between brisken vs brisket
brisken
English
Etymology
brisk +? -en
Verb
brisken (third-person singular simple present briskens, present participle briskening, simple past and past participle briskened)
- (transitive) To become, or make, brisk; to hasten.
brisken From the web:
- what brisket
- what brisket to buy for smoking
- what brisket is best for smoking
- what brisket to buy
- what brisket does franklin use
- what's brisket made from
- what's brisket in spanish
- what's brisket beef
brisket
English
Etymology
From Middle English brusket, probably from Old Danish bryske (“cartilage, gristle”), from Old Norse brjósk, from Proto-Germanic *briuskiz (compare German Brausche (“knot on the head”)). Doublet of bruise. Cognate with Danish brusk, Icelandic brjósk.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?b??sk?t/
- Rhymes: -?sk?t
Noun
brisket (countable and uncountable, plural briskets)
- The chest of an animal
- A cut of meat taken from the chest, especially from the section under the first five ribs
Translations
Anagrams
- beskirt
brisket From the web:
- what brisket
- what brisket to buy
- what brisket to buy for smoking
- what brisket to smoke
- what brisket should i buy
- what brisket does franklin use
- what's brisket made from
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- brisken vs brisket
- briskest vs brisket
- brisker vs brisket
- brisket vs brisketbone
- brisket vs brisked
- frisket vs brisket
- edamame vs soybeans
- soybeans vs byproduct
- soybeans vs bycorn
- porkandbeans vs soybeans
- corn vs soybeans
- cayobobeans vs soybeans
- navybeans vs soybeans
- oxtail vs ribs
- oxtail vs suboxtail
- foxtail vs oxtail
- oxtail vs mobile
- soup vs oxtail
- classic vs oxtail
- braising vs oxtail