breakle
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]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
[edit]breakle (comparative more breakle, superlative most breakle)
- (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."
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- English terms inherited from Middle English
- English terms derived from Middle English
- English terms derived from Old English
- English terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- English terms suffixed with -le
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