Bruit

Etymology
From bruit:.

Pronunciation

 * Homophones: brute
 * Homophones: brute
 * Homophones: brute

Verb

 * 1) 🇺🇸 to spread, promulgate or disseminate a rumour, news etc.
 * 2) * 1590, Thomas Hariot, A Brief and True Report of the new found land of Virginia,
 * There haue bin diuers and variable reportes with some slaunderous and shamefull speeches bruited abroade by many that returned from thence.
 * 1) * c. 1600 William Shakespeare, Hamlet, Act I, Scene 2, lines 127–128,
 * And the King's rouse the heaven shall bruit again,
 * Re-speaking earthly thunder.
 * 1) * 1997, Don DeLillo, Underworld,
 * Paranoid. Now he knew what it meant, this word that was bandied and bruited so easily, and he sensed the connections being made around him.

Etymology
From bruit:, use as a noun of the past participle form of bruire:, from a Proto-Romanic alteration (by association with braire:) of Latin rugire:.

Noun

 * 1) a noise
 * 2) a rumor or report

Derived terms

 * bruitage
 * bruiteur

Anagrams

 * tribu

Noun

 * 1) noise; sounds

Descendants

 * English:
 * French:

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