different between wintry vs brisk

wintry

English

Alternative forms

  • wintery

Etymology

From Old English wintrig. Also constructed from winter +? -y.

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?w?nt(?)??/
  • (General American) enPR: w?n?t(?-)r?, IPA(key): /?w?nt(?)?i/, [?w???(?)?i]
  • Rhymes: -?nt?i
  • Hyphenation: win?try

Adjective

wintry (comparative wintrier, superlative wintriest)

  1. Suggestive or characteristic of winter; cold, stormy.
    wintry weather
  2. Of precipitation, containing sleet or snow.
    It will be cloudy overnight, with outbreaks of heavy rain at times. The rain may turn wintry over higher ground.
  3. Aged, white-haired.
  4. Chilling, cheerless.
    • 1934, Frank Richards, The Magnet, The Bounder's Folly
      He reached the old ruins at last, dim masses of moss-grown masonry in the glimmer of the wintry starlight.
    a wintry remark

Synonyms

  • (suggestive or characteristic of winter): brumal, hibernal, hiemal

Derived terms

Translations

References

  • wintry at OneLook Dictionary Search
  • Webster's Seventh New Collegiate Dictionary, Springfield, Massachusetts, G.&C. Merriam Co., 1967

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brisk

English

Etymology

Uncertain. Compare Welsh brwysg and French brusque.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /b??sk/
  • Rhymes: -?sk

Adjective

brisk (comparative brisker or more brisk, superlative briskest or most brisk)

  1. Full of liveliness and activity; characterized by quickness of motion or action
    Synonyms: lively, spirited, quick
    We took a brisk walk yesterday.
  2. Full of spirit of life; effervescing
  3. (archaic) sparkling; fizzy
    brisk cider
  4. Stimulating or invigorating.
    This morning was a brisk fall day. It wasn't cold enough for frost, but you wanted to keep moving.
  5. Abrupt, curt in one's manner or in relation to others.
    • 1919, W. Somerset Maugham, The Moon and Sixpence, ch. 15
      Her manner was brisk, and her good-breeding scarcely concealed her conviction that if you were not a soldier you might as well be a counter-jumper.

Translations

See also

  • brusque

Verb

brisk (third-person singular simple present brisks, present participle brisking, simple past and past participle brisked)

  1. (transitive, intransitive, often with "up") To make or become lively; to enliven; to animate.

Further reading

  • brisk in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
  • brisk in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.
  • brisk at OneLook Dictionary Search

Anagrams

  • Birks, birks

Albanian

Etymology

From brej, possibly related to Proto-Indo-European *bhrisqo- (bitter). Compare Norwegian brisk (bitter taste), brisken (bitter, sharp), Welsh brysg, French brusque, Russian ????????? (brezgát?, nauseate, feel disgust), English brisk.

Noun

brisk m

  1. razor
  2. sharp, smart, keen, freezing cold

Lithuanian

Alternative forms

  • briski

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [b?r??s?k]

Verb

brìsk

  1. second-person singular imperative of bristi

Norwegian Nynorsk

Etymology 1

Possibly onomatopoetic of the sound made when put on fire.

Noun

brisk m (definite singular brisken, indefinite plural briskar, definite plural briskane)

  1. juniper
Synonyms
  • brake, einer

Etymology 2

From Middle Low German britse, britsche, briske.

Noun

brisk m (definite singular brisken, indefinite plural briskar, definite plural briskane)

  1. a wall-bound sleeping bench

References

brisk From the web:

  • what brisket
  • what brisket to buy
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  • what brisket to smoke
  • what brisk means
  • what brisk walking
  • what brisk walk means
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