Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

breakle

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Remove ads

English

Etymology

From Middle English brekil, brikel, brukel, brokel (easily broken or shattered, brittle, fragile), from Old English *brycel, *brucol (as in hūsbrycel (burglarious, literally tending to break into houses, i.e. "house-breakative"), scipbrucol (destructive to shipping, causing shipwreck, literally tending to break ships or shipping down, i.e. "ship-breakative")), from Proto-Germanic *brukilaz, *brukulaz (liable or tending to break), extended form of Proto-Germanic *brukiz (breakable), equivalent to break + -le. Compare brittle.

Adjective

breakle (comparative more breakle, superlative most breakle)

  1. (dialectal) Apt to, capable of, or tending to break; fragile; brittle.
    • 1855, Ulster Archaeological Society, Ulster journal of archaeology:
      At "Blackhead" — "Here is a breakle black touche stone under other rough stone."

Anagrams

Remove ads

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads