Associations to the word «Browning»
Noun
- Tennyson
- Tod
- Barrett
- M2
- Caliber
- Fn
- Wordsworth
- Keats
- Monologue
- Carlyle
- Shelley
- Remington
- Sonnet
- Recoil
- Ruskin
- Dickens
- Armament
- Pistol
- Mk
- Poem
- Shotgun
- Mercedes
- Dracula
- Carbine
- Orr
- Coleridge
- Ferris
- Colt
- Kenyon
- Optimism
- Turret
- Leigh
- Freak
- Machine
- Cartridge
- Elizabeth
- Rifle
- Winchester
- Chaucer
- Eliot
- Ezra
- Gun
- Dante
- Montague
- Robert
- M1
- Meredith
- Blot
- Frying
- Mcqueen
- Lon
- Handgun
- Sludge
- Poet
- Firearm
- Mm
- Launcher
- Myra
- Byron
- Aurora
- Obscurity
- Grenade
- Holster
- Emily
- Locking
- M3
- Blaster
- Pt
- Millimeter
- Poetry
- Goethe
- Breech
- Whitman
- Piper
- Florence
- Bronson
- Cindy
- Terence
- Kurt
- Rust
- Spitfire
- Lindsey
- Fra
- Rifleman
- Tripod
- Shakespeare
- Courtship
- Ghent
Verb
Wiktionary
BROWNING, verb. Present participle of brown
BROWNING, noun. The act or operation of giving a brown colour, as to gun barrels, etc.
BROWNING, noun. (masonry) A smooth coat of brown mortar, usually the second coat, and the preparation for the finishing coat of plaster.
BROWNING, proper noun. A surname.
BROWNING, proper noun. In Europe, a small, semi-automatic handgun. For the first half-century of their manufacturer, the majority of semi-automatic handguns in Europe were designed by John M. Browning.
BROWNING, proper noun. Robert Browning, a poet.
BROWNING OUT, verb. Present participle of brown out
Dictionary definition
BROWNING, noun. United States inventor of firearms (especially automatic pistols and repeating rifles and a machine gun called the Peacemaker) (1855-1926).
BROWNING, noun. English poet and husband of Elizabeth Barrett Browning noted for his dramatic monologues (1812-1889).
BROWNING, noun. English poet best remembered for love sonnets written to her husband Robert Browning (1806-1861).
BROWNING, noun. Cooking to a brown crispiness over a fire or on a grill; "proper toasting should brown both sides of a piece of bread".
Wise words
The right word may be effective, but no word was ever as
effective as a rightly timed pause.