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brisé
[ bree-zey; French bree-zey ]
noun
- a ballet movement in which the dancer jumps off one foot, beats the legs together, and lands on both feet.
Word History and Origins
Example Sentences
That trial unveiled financing links between the Cercle Wagram and the Brise de Mer, a Corsican organized crime group.
Ferracci is also a television actor who appears in “Mafiosa,” a series said to be inspired by the Brise de Mer gang.
Sir Evelyn Ruggles Brise had evidently settled the difficulty in the most humane spirit.
The concluding words are: en vivant et en voyant les hommes, il faut que le cour se brise ou se bronze.
Brise-Bleu nodded affirmatively, went into the wood, and came out dragging after him a donkey loaded with two baskets.
There was a sound of footsteps in the passage, and Brise, the captain of cricket, burst unceremoniously into the room.
To-day new silk brise-bise appeared on the second floor, and a glimpse of a branching palm.
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