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Behave like an ass
Answer for the clue "Behave like an ass ", 4 letters:
bray
Alternative clues for the word bray
Word definitions for bray in dictionaries
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Bray \Bray\, v. t. To make or utter with a loud, discordant, or harsh and grating sound. Arms on armor clashing, brayed Horrible discord. --MIlton. And varying notes the war pipes brayed. --Sir W. Scott.
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Bray is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Alan Bray (1948–2001), British historian Anna Eliza Bray (1790–1883), British novelist Angie Bray (born 1953), British politician Billy Bray (1794–1868), British preacher Charles Bray (1811–1884), ...
Usage examples of bray.
Then he tried to picture the steel-brained Lieutenant Bray grinding out the necessary words.
Lieutenant Bray was speaking again and that in that normally determined voice there was the barest touch of grief.
Lieutenant Bray, the visible event, then, was: the man in the seat beside him suddenly went limp.
To Bray the world was what it was, no more and no less, no better and no worse.
For several days Bray considered what he could say that would detour the older man from being as smart as he usually was.
God, Bray parked his car near but not exactly at the Earth federation military post.
Equally wrong was the earnestness with which he now plied Lieutenant Lester Bray with an excess of liquid refreshment.
During that time Bray made enough tests, while maintaining his drunken appearance for the benefit of the guard, to establish that all the steel hard doors of the sturdy machine were locked.
Ferraris farm Bray sang a little and muttered certain philosophical remarks about the fact that there were probably no really important events in any one area of the universe.
Though Bray had practiced many times the act of spitting it out, he still gagged as he belched it forth.
Pietro will go with you, and in the morning he will make sure that Lieutenant Lester Bray does indeed leave your office a free man.
The two men ate in silence, while Bray began to realize that he had a problem coming up soon.
He now resumed his breakneck speed, and in another little while they came to the botanical gardens which Morton, had he been conscious, would have recognized as just about where Bray and he had been the previous afternoon.
Morton wanted, as Bray suavely outlined it, was information about the Diamondian peace delegation.
And Sutter, who understood every nuance of what he was doing, hated him the more for it but still did not suspect that he had been given a message which had originated exclusively in the brain of Lester Bray, himself.