braid
Plural: braids
Noun
- a hairdo formed by braiding or twisting the hair
- trimming used to decorate clothes or curtains
- A sudden movement; a jerk, a wrench.
- A weave of three or more strands of fibers, ribbons, cords or hair often for decoration.
- A stranded wire composed of a number of smaller wires twisted together.
- A tubular sheath made of braided strands of metal placed around a central cable for shielding against electromagnetic interference.
- A caprice or outburst of passion or anger.
- Given two sets of n points on corresponding positions on two parallel lines, a braid is a unique set of crossings (over or under) between n strands that connect each point on one line to a point on the other line such that all points represent the terminus of one and only one strand and the traversal of any strand from a starting point to an ending point never moves further away from the from the ending point.
- A wicker guard for protecting newly grafted trees.
- A moment, stound.
- A turn of work, job.
- A trick; deception.
- A shelf or board for holding objects.
- A board to press curd for cheese.
- A flat board attached to a beam, used for weighing.
Verb
Verb Forms: braided, braiding, braids
- To weave three or more strands of hair or material together.
- make by braiding or interlacing
- decorate with braids or ribbons
- "braid a collar"
- form or weave into a braid or braids
- "braid hair"
- To make a sudden movement with, to jerk.
- To start into motion.
- To weave together, intertwine (strands of fibers, ribbons, etc.); to arrange (hair) in braids.
- To mix, or make uniformly soft, by beating, rubbing, or straining, as in preparing food.
- To reproach; to upbraid.
Adj
- Crafty, deceitful.
Examples
- She tried to BRAID her letters into a long word, but the consonants just wouldn’t cooperate.
Origin / Etymology
From Middle English braiden, breided, bræiden, from Old English breġdan (“to move quickly, pull, shake, swing, throw (wrestling), draw (sword), drag; bend, weave, braid, knit, join together; change color, vary, be transformed; bind, knot; move, be pulled; flash”), from Proto-West Germanic *bregdan, from Proto-Germanic *bregdaną (“to flicker, flutter, jerk, tug, twitch, flinch, move, swing”), from Proto-Indo-European *bʰrēḱ-, *bʰrēǵ- (“to shine, shimmer”).
Cognate with Scots Scots brade, Scots braid (“to move quickly or suddenly”), Saterland Frisian braidje (“to knit”), West Frisian breidzje, Dutch breien (“to knit”), Low German breiden, German breiden, Bavarian bretten (“to move quickly, twitch”), Icelandic bregða (“to move quickly, jerk”), Faroese bregða (“to move quickly, react swiftly; to draw (sword)”) and Faroese bregda (“to plaid, braid, twist, twine”).
Antonyms
Scrabble Score: 8
braid: valid Scrabble (US) TWL Wordbraid: valid Scrabble Word in Merriam-Webster MW Dictionary
braid: valid Scrabble Word in International Collins CSW Dictionary