brass-necked
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See also: brassnecked
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Audio (General Australian): (file)
Adjective
[edit]brass-necked (comparative more brass-necked, superlative most brass-necked)
- (idiomatic, UK, Ireland) Nervy; cheeky; shameless.
- 2007 August 6, Dave Hill, “Plane sailing?”, in The Guardian[1]:
- I was at Stansted airport with my wife, younger kids and a niece the other week to take a flight to Dublin; one provided by that brass-necked, self-proclaimed champion of the air-travelling masses Michael O'Leary and his low-cost trailblazer Ryanair.
- 2019 September 26, Polly Toynbee, “Boris Johnson’s brutish parliamentary performance defied all democratic dignity”, in The Guardian[2]:
- “Humbug”. That word may sink him. “Unfit” was Corbyn’s sombrely measured term. Brazen, brass-necked, thrashing about wildly in proclaiming the 11 supreme court justices “wrong”, Boris Johnson’s performance last night defied all democratic dignity.
Verb
[edit]brass-necked
- simple past and past participle of brass-neck