brick

Etymology
From late, , , from and  "cracked or broken brick; tile-stone"; modern 🇨🇬, ultimately related to , whence also 🇨🇬 and 🇨🇬. Compare also 🇨🇬. Related to.

Noun

 * 1)  A hardened rectangular block of mud, clay etc., used for building.
 * This wall is made of bricks.
 * 1)  Such hardened mud, clay, etc. considered collectively, as a building material.
 * This house is made of brick.
 * 1)  Something shaped like a brick.
 * a plastic explosive brick
 * 1)  A helpful and reliable person.
 * Thanks for helping me wash the car. You're a brick.
 * 1)  A shot which misses, particularly one which bounces directly out of the basket because of a too-flat trajectory, as if the ball were a heavier object.
 * We can't win if we keep throwing up bricks from three-point land.
 * 1)  A power brick; an external power supply consisting of a small box with an integral male power plug and an attached electric cord terminating in another power plug.
 * 2)  An electronic device, especially a heavy box-shaped one, that has become non-functional or obsolete.
 * 3)  A projectile.
 * 4)  A carton of 500 rimfire cartridges, which forms the approximate size and shape of a brick.
 * 5)  A community card (usually the turn or the river) which does not improve a player's hand.
 * 6) The colour brick red.
 * 7)  A kilogram of cocaine.
 * 1)  A power brick; an external power supply consisting of a small box with an integral male power plug and an attached electric cord terminating in another power plug.
 * 2)  An electronic device, especially a heavy box-shaped one, that has become non-functional or obsolete.
 * 3)  A projectile.
 * 4)  A carton of 500 rimfire cartridges, which forms the approximate size and shape of a brick.
 * 5)  A community card (usually the turn or the river) which does not improve a player's hand.
 * 6) The colour brick red.
 * 7)  A kilogram of cocaine.
 * 1) The colour brick red.
 * 2)  A kilogram of cocaine.
 * 1)  A kilogram of cocaine.

Adjective



 * 1)  Extremely cold.

Verb

 * 1)  To build, line, or form with bricks.
 * 2)  To make into bricks.
 * 3) * 1904 September 15, James C. Bennett, Walter Renton Ingalls (editor), Lead Smelting and Refining with Some Notes on Lead Mining (1906), The Engineering and Mining Journal, page 66
 * The plant, which is here described, for bricking fine ores and flue dust, was designed and the plans produced in the engineering department of the Selby smelter.
 * 1)  To hit someone or something with a brick.
 * 2)  To make an electronic device nonfunctional and usually beyond repair, essentially making it no more useful than a brick.
 * 3)  To become nonfunctional, especially in a way beyond repair.
 * 4)  To blunder; to screw up.
 * 1)  To make an electronic device nonfunctional and usually beyond repair, essentially making it no more useful than a brick.
 * 2)  To become nonfunctional, especially in a way beyond repair.
 * 3)  To blunder; to screw up.
 * 1)  To blunder; to screw up.
 * 1)  To blunder; to screw up.
 * 1)  To blunder; to screw up.
 * 1)  To blunder; to screw up.
 * 1)  To blunder; to screw up.

Etymology
From.

Noun

 * 1)  a brig, a two-masted vessel type
 * 2) a fritter with a filling

Etymology
From.

Noun

 * 1) stone, pebble

Etymology
.