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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Brigge

Brigge \Brig"ge\, n. A bridge. [Obs.]
--Chaucer.

Wiktionary
brigge

n. (obsolete form of bridge English)

Usage examples of "brigge".

Far enough, he said with a thin, dark smile, but today only from Brigge.

Aunt Elfrid was the youngest of the three, she married a cooper, bastard Norman he was, a little dark fellow from Brigge, called Walter.

Walter the cooper had a shop in the hilltop town of Brigge, in a narrow alley no great way from the shadow of the castle walls.

Heriet drew breath long and deeply, but without any evidence of fear or stress, and told it again as he had told it to Hugh at Brigge.

He has a sister married to a craftsman in Brigge, and was visiting his kin like any honest man.

And when I brought him from Brigge, he was frantic to get news of her, for hed given her up for lost after Hyde burned, but when I told him there was a second brother come from Hyde with Godfrid, then he was easy, for he knew who the second must be.

And when I brought him from Brigge, he was frantic to get news of her, for he’d given her up for lost after Hyde burned, but when I told him there was a second brother come from Hyde with Godfrid, then he was easy, for he knew who the second must be.

The Danes had reached no further south than Brigge in this shire, but they had left a few of their getting behind when they retreated.