Associations to the word «Brook»
Noun
- Hollow
- Bough
- Torrent
- Meadows
- Ripple
- Overflow
- Shropshire
- Bog
- Gully
- Lea
- Rea
- Hubbard
- Moose
- Viaduct
- Crosse
- Carp
- Woodland
- Hackney
- Tumbling
- Bourne
- Scranton
- Westerly
- Glen
- Creek
- Crevice
- Aqueduct
- Bridges
- Susquehanna
- Champlain
- Mccoy
- Fissure
- Fern
- Irina
- Cedar
- Cascade
- Hamlet
- Pine
- Catfish
- Eel
- River
- Pike
- Turnpike
- Ditch
- Hedge
- Moss
- Thirst
- Easterly
- Bound
- Walden
- Moor
- Aspen
- Bloomfield
- Drainage
- Spring
- Timothy
- Midsummer
- Racket
- Waterway
- Middlesex
- Fed
- Notch
- Swamp
- Clump
- Baxter
- Happiness
- Knoll
- Lyndon
- Falls
- Shallow
- Cove
- Tennyson
- Passion
- Rutgers
- Birch
- Valley
- Keynes
- Bathe
- Debate
- Slope
Adverb
Wiktionary
BROOK, verb. (transitive) (obsolete) (except in Scots) To use; enjoy; have the full employment of.
BROOK, verb. (transitive) (obsolete) To earn; deserve.
BROOK, verb. (transitive) To bear; endure; support; put up with; tolerate (usually used in the negative, with an abstract noun as object).
BROOK, noun. A body of running water smaller than a river; a small stream. (In the US, brook is a New York and New England term; compare Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia run, and Southern US branch.)
BROOK, noun. (Sussex) (Kent) A water meadow.
BROOK, noun. (Sussex) (Kent) (in the plural) Low, marshy ground.
BROOK, proper noun. A surname for someone living by a brook.
BROOK, proper noun. A surname, a transliteration and normalization of Hebrew ברך.
BROOK, proper noun. A male given name transferred from the surname.
BROOK, proper noun. A female given name of modern usage; more often spelled Brooke.
BROOK ALDER, noun. American winterberry, Ilex verticillata.
BROOK LAMPREY, noun. A small European lamprey, Lampetra planeri.
BROOK LAMPREYS, noun. Plural of brook lamprey
BROOK TROUT, noun. (British) A fish of the subspecies Salmo trutta fario, the brown trout.
BROOK TROUT, noun. A fish of the species Salvelinus fontinalis.
BROOK TROUTS, noun. Plural of brook trout
Dictionary definition
BROOK, noun. A natural stream of water smaller than a river (and often a tributary of a river); "the creek dried up every summer".
BROOK, verb. Put up with something or somebody unpleasant; "I cannot bear his constant criticism"; "The new secretary had to endure a lot of unprofessional remarks"; "he learned to tolerate the heat"; "She stuck out two years in a miserable marriage".
Wise words
Words may show a man's wit but actions his meaning.