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See also: brow-beat

English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From brow +‎ beat.

Pronunciation

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Verb

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browbeat (third-person singular simple present browbeats, present participle browbeating, simple past browbeat, past participle browbeaten)

  1. (transitive) To bully in an intimidating, bossy, or supercilious way.
    Synonyms: bully, cow, domineer, intimidate; see also Thesaurus:intimidate
    Though the teacher browbeat all the children, they still acted out during the lesson.
    • 1993 November 28, Carol Muske, quoting Dudley Fitts, “Laura Riding Roughshod”, in The New York Times[1], →ISSN:
      Dudley Fitts reared far back, pronouncing her [Laura Riding] with “few equals” when it came to “browbeating an audience into conviction by sheer force of arrogance, among any poets living or dead.”
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Translations

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References

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