broom
[ broom, broo m ]
/ brum, brʊm /
noun
verb (used with object)
verb (used without object)
(of a piling, tent peg, etc.) to be crushed and spread at the top from being driven.
Origin of broom
before 1000; Middle English
brome, Old English
brōm; cognate with Dutch
braam bramble, German
Bram broom
pronunciation note for broom
Broom and
room occur with the vowel
[oo] /u/ of
fool or
[oo] /ʊ/ of
book. The first is the more common. The pronunciation with the
[oo] /ʊ/ of
book is found in New England, eastern Virginia, and South Carolina and Georgia alongside the
[oo] /u/ pronunciation. Farther west the
[oo] /u/ pronunciation is more common, though the pronunciation with the vowel of
book occurs everywhere with no marked regional or social pattern. Both pronunciations occur in British standard and folk speech. The pronunciation with
[oo] /ʊ/ predominates in the eastern counties,
[oo] /u/ everywhere else. London lies on the boundary between the two types, and it is thus not surprising that
[oo] /ʊ/ is found in the United States in the coastal areas that had long and close contact with England.
Words nearby broom
brookner,
brooks,
brooks range,
brookweed,
brooky,
broom,
broom board,
broomball,
broomcorn,
broomfield,
broomrape
Example sentences from the Web for broom
British Dictionary definitions for broom
broom
/ (bruːm, brʊm) /
noun
an implement for sweeping consisting of a long handle to which is attached either a brush of straw, bristles, or twigs, bound together, or a solid head into which are set tufts of bristles or fibres
any of various yellow-flowered Eurasian leguminous shrubs of the genera Cytisus, Genista, and Spartium, esp C. scoparius
any of various similar Eurasian plants of the related genera Genista and Spartium
new broom
a newly appointed official, etc, eager to make changes
verb
(tr)
to sweep with a broom
Word Origin for broom
Old English
brōm; related to Old High German
brāmo, Middle Dutch
bremme
Idioms and Phrases with broom
broom
see new broom sweeps clean.