Meaning of bristler | Babel Free
Definitions
- Someone or something that bristles.
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A bristled pig. informal
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A conman. obsolete
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A person of low social class. derogatory, obsolete
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A soldier who is part of a company that carries pikes. obsolete, slang
Examples
“but study this useful little insect, and we find that by care and attention we may not only manage to approach the little bristler, without fear of its weapon, but extract so many sweets, that when we know its service, we wonder how any one on earth can be so silly as to quarrel with it!”
“Is it the braggart and the bristler, the man who has nothing to learn, who would build a wall between America and other lands, or would array America against the world;”
“We are the "bristlers," the easily hurt and hostile, the solitary ones, the "people are bums" man, the "don't let anyone know" woman.”
“The old school baseball people bristled (Showalter was probably the chief bristler), but the fans fell in love with his big swings and big personality.”
“And Claudia wasn't a bristler by nature; she was as bubbly as they came.”
“'Twas he who rear'd the roe-deer's brood, And the young bristler of the wood ;”
“Music on the hog-octave. The other bristlers whipped into the back-ground.”
“Duttoo arrived as soon almost as we did at the tents, with more good news, and we were remounted and among the bristlers again in no time.”
“Also David W. Magie, tamed as the originator of the Magie or Poland China hog, produced from four distinct breeds of bristlers about the year 1840.”
“A beast, like Calydon's of yore, Boasts headbands never bristler wore.”
“This being so, we may note that foreigners who disliked our long-haired kings no only insulted them by calling them the 'bristled ones' butals said their bristles were a thing they had in common with lions, horses and swine (which for this reason are all called Setosi and Setigeri, bristlers), and they even extended the insult by saying they had pig's bristles.”
“A friend of mine having occasion to show this section to a party of 4 bristlers, states that they withdrew a pace and seemed to be computing among themselves.”
“A bristle was a loaded or crooked dice. lt was specially weighted which meant that it fell on whichever number the bristler chose.”
“But I own I like a quiet unobtrusive bristler — the sort of man who doesn't want to take you beyond ten times ten in the multiplication table.”
“Amont the thirty thousand men led to war by Charles VIII., six thousand Swiss soldiers were especially remarked, formed in large square battalions, of one thousand men each, which were called "bristlers," in allusion to the pikes which they presented on all sides.”
“Many attacks and retreats did Bruin make boldly, notwithstanding the roar and warlike phalanx attitude of the bristlers.”
CEFR level
B2
Upper Intermediate
This word is part of the CEFR B2 vocabulary — upper intermediate level.
This word is part of the CEFR B2 vocabulary — upper intermediate level.