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brantle
† ˈbrantle Obs. [Phonetic var. of brandle.] A kind of dance; = brangle n.1 2, branle n. 2, bransle n. 2.1662 Pepys Diary 31 Dec., They danced the Brantle. 1846 Sir R. de Coverley 229 Asking a thousand questions..respecting certain brantles and corantos.
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Branle
A branle ( , ), also bransle, brangle, brawl(e), brall(e), braul(e), brando (in Italy), bran (in Spain), or brantle (in Scotland), is a type of French
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bransle
† ˈbransle Obs. Also 8 bransel. [a. F. bransle (16th c.), a graphical variant of branle: see branle, also brangle, brantle.] 1. Movement, perturbation. rare. (= brangle n.1 1, branle n. 1.)1603 Florio Montaigne iii. ix. (1632) 565 Observe..the motions and bransles of the Heavens. 2. A kind of dance;...
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branle
▪ I. † ˈbranle, n. Obs. [a. F. branle.] 1. Wavering, agitation, (?) confusion.1581 Savile Tacitus' Hist. ii. (1591) 78 The Legion incensed with griefe..put them of the first [legion] in branle [impulit primanos]. 2. A kind of dance, and the kind of music suitable to it; = brangle n.1 2, bransle 2, b...
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brangle
▪ I. † ˈbrangle, n.1 Obs. [Phonetic variant of branle v.; cf. brangle v.1, also brandle, bransle, brantle.] 1. A shake, an impulse, a setting in motion; = F. branle, branle, bransle.1652 Urquhart Jewel Wks. (1834) 266 Forced, for want of a convenient agent to give them the due brangle, to lye immobi...
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brandle
† ˈbrandle, v. Obs. [ad. F. branler, found in both senses; the d may be due to an acquaintance with the earlier Fr. form brandeler, but more probably is merely phonetic, as in spindle; cf. also brangle, branle, bransle, brantle.] a. trans. To shake, shock, cause to waver. b. intr. To become unsteady...
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