Crossword clues for brian
brian
- Williams of NBC
- TV news veteran Williams
- Tough guy actor Donlevy
- Suspended "NBC Nightly News" anchor Williams
- Stray Cats frontman Setzer
- Songwriter Wilson
- Royal Irish name
- Queen lead guitarist __ May
- Queen co-founder May
- Quarterback Hoyer
- Premier Tobin
- Playwright Friel
- Piccolo of football fame
- Musician Eno
- Mulroney of Canada
- Johnson of the band AC/DC
- Hall-of-Fame linebacker Urlacher
- Guitarist May of Queen
- Good name for a dyslexic neurosurgeon?
- Gayle Sayers' teammate Piccolo
- Gale's friend Piccolo
- Former Canadian prime minister Mulroney
- Figure skater Boitano
- De Palma or Piccolo
- Cox of "Succession"
- Astros catcher McCann
- "Life of ___" (Monty Python film)
- "Family Guy" dog voiced by Seth MacFarlane
- "Family Guy" dog
- "Family Guy" beagle
- "Carlito's Way" director De Palma
- Bear Piccolo
- Skater Boitano
- ___ Boru, Irish king who defeated the Norse
- Beach Boy Wilson
- Jones of the original Rolling Stones
- News anchor Williams
- Monty Python title character
- Director De Palma
- Newscaster Williams
- Jones once of the Stones
- Jones of the original Stones
- Actor Aherne
- Boru or Aherne
- Actor Keith
- Donlevy or Aherne
- Ireland's ___ Boru
- Boy's name
- Wilson of the Beach Boys
- Piccolo played by James Caan
- Gale's teammate Piccolo
- "Monty Python's Life of ___"
- The Beach Boys' Wilson
- NBC News anchor Williams
- May of Queen
- Actor Dennehy
- "Monty Python's Life of __"
- 'Family Guy' dog
- Williams who anchored "NBC Nightly News" for 10 years
- Williams suspended from NBC News in February 2015
- Williams on MSNBC
Wiktionary
vb. (context dialectal Northern England English) To keep fire at the mouth of (as of an oven), to give light or to preserve heat.
Gazetteer
Wikipedia
Brian (sometimes spelled Bryan) is a male given name of Irish and Breton origin, as well as a surname of Occitan origin. It is common in the English-speaking world. It is possible that the name is derived from an Old Celtic word meaning "high" or "noble". For example, the element bre means "hill"; which could be transferred to mean "eminence" or "exalted one". The name is quite popular in Ireland, on account of Brian Boru, a 10th-century king of Ireland. The name was also quite popular in East Anglia during the Middle Ages. This is because the name was introduced to England by Bretons following the Norman Conquest. Bretons also settled in Ireland along with the Normans in the 12th century, and 'their' name was mingled with the 'Irish' version. Also, in the north-west of England, the 'Irish' name was introduced by Scandinavian settlers from Ireland. Within the Gaelic speaking areas of Scotland, the name was at first only used by professional families of Irish origin. It was the fourth most popular male name in England and Wales in 1934, but a sharp decline followed over the remainder of the 20th century and by 1994 it had fallen out of the top 100. It retained its popularity in the United States for longer; its most popular period there was from 1968–1979 when it consistently ranked between eighth and tenth.
The surname Brian is sometimes an English and Irish variant spelling of the surname Bryan. The English and French surname Brian is sometimes derived from the personal Celtic personal name shown above. The surname Brian can also sometimes be a French surname; derived from the Old Occitan word brian, meaning " maggot" and used as a nickname.
Variants of the name include Briant, Brien, Bran, Brion, Bryan, Bryant, Brjánn (in Icelandic) and Bryon. Variant spellings such as "Brien" are sometimes used as female given names, especially among members of the Irish diaspora.
In Gaelic mythology, Brian was one of the three Sons of Tuireann along with Iuchar and Iucharba.
In Oidheadh Chlainne Tuireann (The Tragedy of the Sons of Tuireann), the three set out to kill their father's enemy Cian. Cian is the father of Lugh, one of the greatest of the Tuatha Dé Danann. Cian shapeshifts into a pig to disguise himself, but the brothers shapeshift into dogs and hound him. They kill him, dismember his body and try to cover up their crime. In recompense, Lugh makes them quest all around the known world fetching magical weapons, which Lugh plans to use at the Second Battle of Magh Tuireadh. They succeed in obtaining all that Lugh demanded, but return to Ireland badly wounded, pleading for Lugh to heal them; but he refuses.
In at least one version of this tale, Brian is the clever and subtle one, while his brothers Iuchar and Iucharba are bumbling and easily overawed by Brian. This tale of the Sons of Tuireann has sometimes been likened to an Irish Argonautica.
In later Scottish folklore, Brian was the name of a pompous man who helped the Cailleach rescue Deò-ghrèine.
Brian may refer to:
- Brian, masculine given name and surname, and selected list of people with the name
:* Brian (mythology) in Celtic mythology
:* Brian (character) on the Larry Sanders Show
- Brian (software), software package for neural network simulations
Brian is an open source Python package for developing simulations of networks of spiking neurons. Version 1 was developed by Dan Goodman and Romain Brette, and version 2 is being developed primarily by Marcel Stimberg.
Usage examples of "brian".
Brian said that night to Antigone, who had joined us for pizza and root beer.
Around the two golden baubles with their glittering stones, five other hollows of differing shapes and sizes gaped empty of occupants, their emptiness seeming to mock the aspirations of this puny, short-lived mortal man called Brian.
Two of the coaches, George Owen and Brian Tweego, walked through the ranks, bestowing their shrill blessing on prince and dog alike.
Much as she had downplayed cause-and-effect when Brian suggested it, she might have been wrong.
John McCarthy and Terry Waite were hostages in Beirut, together with an Irishman called Brian Keenan and countless Americans, and every agency, man, and dog in the Western world was running around trying to find them.
His coworker on command pulled a box from inside the vehicle, and, as Brian watched, Atef was intubated and bagged.
This expression has no known textual justification and is due to Brian Hodgson, British resident in Kathmandu in the early nineteenth century who may nevertheless have heard or read it.
Brian had been nothing, a mailroom clerk, where he was division manager.
Esther set them up with a hat, mittens, and mitten clips, and then, because Brian was riding high on the fact that it had been painless, he let Julia pick out some new winter clothes, again from a pre narrowed selection.
Moore, Brian, 547 Moore, Jim, 81 Moorefield, Kenneth, 550 Moorer, Thomas H.
A week and a half after the murders, police in West Memphis were told that four days after the bodies were found, two young Memphis men, Chris Morgan and Brian Holland, had left town abruptly and had moved to Oceanside, California.
And Dominic raced into the outfitters store where Brian had gotten his boots.
Brian Fitzpatrick SIR,- Yours received, and am surprized you should use me in this manner, as have never seen any of your cash, unless for one linsey-woolsey coat, and your bill now is upwards of L150.
Jimmy was doing in intensive care, and when Mrs Palissey came back I took Brian with me to the wholesalers, where he helped me shift umpteen cases from the stores onto trolleys, and from those trolleys to other trolleys at the pay desk, for rolling out to the van, and from the second trolleys into the van, and, back at the shop, from the van into the storeroom.
Mrs Palissey, pleasantly martyred, agreed to do the wholesalers run with Brian in the afternoon.