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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Brest

Brest \Brest\, 3d sing. pr. for Bursteth. [Obs.]

Brest

Brest \Brest\, Breast \Breast\, n. (Arch.) A torus. [Obs.]

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Brest

city in France, from Celtic, from bre "hill." The city in Belarus is from Slavic berest "elm." Part of Lithuania from 1319, it thus was known, for purposes of distinguishing them, as Brest Litovsk until 1921.

Wiktionary
brest

n. (obsolete spelling of breast English)

Wikipedia
Břest

Břest is a village and municipality ( obec) in Kroměříž District in the Zlín Region of the Czech Republic.

The municipality covers an area of , and has a population of 933 (as at 28 August 2006).

Břest lies approximately north-east of Kroměříž, north-west of Zlín, and east of Prague.

Brest (Belarus)
  1. redirect Brest, Belarus
Brest (Merošina)

Brest is a village situated in Merošina municipality in Serbia.

Brest (surname)

Brest is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

  • Harold Brest, 20th-century American prisoner
  • Jorge Romero Brest (1905–1989), Argentine art critic and curator
  • Lewis F. Brest (1842–1915), Union Army soldier
  • Martin Brest (born 1951), American filmmaker, producer, screenwriter, film editor, and actor
  • Paul Brest, American academic
  • Vida Brest (1925–1985), Slovenian poet and writer

Usage examples of "brest".

The British ministry being apprized of his arrival in France, at once comprehended the destination of the armaments prepared at Brest and Boulogne.

When landing at Brest, your evil genius made you encounter Beausire on the quay, who recognized you immediately, bronzed and altered as you were, while you almost fainted at the sight of him.

Boscawen had been stationed off Toulon, and the coast of Vannes was scoured by a small squadron detached from sir Edward Hawke, who had, during the summer, blocked up the harbour of Brest, where Conflans lay with his fleet, in order to be joined by the other divisions of the armament.

Brest and Toulon, who very often encountered danger, but from the violence of the sea rather than that of the enemy, and who therefore remained obscure, often unpromoted and always poor: had they been in the right place at the right time, they would have done as well or better: it was a question of luck.

Not overtaking him our admiral, Having the coast clear for his purposes, Entered Coruna, and found order there To open the port of Brest and come on hither.

German forces would have been many times more favourable had the Soviet troops had to face the attack of the German forces, not in the regions of Kishinev, Lwow, Brest, Kaunas, and Viborg, but in the region of Odessa, Kamenets Podolski, Minsk, and the environs of Leningrad.

On the following day Von Gallwitz cut the line between Kovno and Brest at Bielsk, and on the 19th Novo Georgievsk fell to the howitzers of Von Beseler, the expert of Antwerp.

The Germans thus gained the whole line from Kovno to Brest, and things were going no better in the south.

Brest to Lambale, within six miles of the English camp, at the head of twelve regular battalions, six squadrons, two regiments of militia, eight mortars, and ten pieces of cannon.

At Brest, and other ports in that kingdom, the French were employed in equipping a powerful armament, and made no scruple to own it was intended for North America.

The lugger was a fast boat, the wind just suited her, and the brig fell farther and farther astern until, as the former entered the bay of Quimper and laid her course north, the brig hauled her wind and turned to rejoin the vessels off Brest.

Renouf, who was genuinely fascinated by bomb ketches and very proud of his mortars, regarded 4,000 yards as an acceptable range: the master armourer at Brest had tried out all four mortars at the sea range off Camaret, firing five rounds from each, with the master shipwright in attendance, and going down and inspecting the underdeck stanchions and the stringers after each round was fired.

Toulon of six sail of the line, two frigates, and two cutters from Brest, gave the French a superiority which, had they known how to use it, would materially have endangered the British Mediterranean fleet.

They are a low and grovelin set of peple, who excite a feelin of loathin in every brest where lorfty emotions and original idees have a bidin place.

He remained mostly in his room, and whenever he did show hisself he walkt in a moody and morose manner in the garding, with his hed bowed down and his arms foldid across his brest.