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Brenne   Listen
verb
Brenne, Bren  v. t. & v. i.  (past & past part. brent; pres. part. brenning)  To burn. (Obs.) "Consuming fire brent his shearing house or stall."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Brenne" Quotes from Famous Books



... and which is he? If love be gode, from whence cometh my woe? If it be wicke, a wonder thinketh me When every torment and adversite That cometh of him may to me savory thinke: For aye more thurst I the more that I drinke. And if that at my owne lust I brenne, From whence cometh my wailing and my pleinte? If harme agre me whereto pleine I thenne? I not nere why unwery that I feinte. O quicke deth, O surele harme so quainte, How may I see in me such quantite, But if that I consent ...
— The Sonnets, Triumphs, and Other Poems of Petrarch • Petrarch

... followers, like Madoc, who said he was his son; or men he had protected, like Maelgwn Vychan in Pembroke. Later on, under Edward II. and Edward III., the rebellions were against the march lords, and the king was looked upon as a protector—such as the rebellion of Llywelyn Bren against the Clares and Mortimers in Glamorgan in 1316. But the wilder spirits went to the French wars, and fought for both sides. With the assassination of Owen of Wales in 1378, the last of Llywelyn's near relatives to dream of restoring the independence of Wales, the rebellions against the King ...
— A Short History of Wales • Owen M. Edwards



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