brant
Etymology 1
New Latin/Medieval Latin Branta, latinized form of Old Norse brandgás (“sheldrake”), literally "burnt (black) goose," from Proto-Germanic *brandaz (“burning”) + *gans (“goose”).
noun
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(Canada, US) Any of several wild geese, of the genus Branta, that breed in the Arctic, but especially the brent goose, Branta bernicla. I have given you roe and reindeer, / I have given you brant and beaver, / Filled the marshes full of wild-fowl, / Filled the rivers full of fishes; / Why then are you not contented? / Why then will you hunt each other? 1855, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, “//dummy.host/index.php?title=s%3AThe+Song+of+Hiawatha%2FBook+I Book I”, in The Song of Hiawatha
Etymology 2
From Old English brant. Cognate with Scots brent, Old Norse brantr, brattr (Faroese and Icelandic brattur, Danish brat, Norwegian Bokmål bratt, Swedish brant).
adj
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(dialectal) steep, precipitous. Grapes grow on the brant rocks so wonderfully that ye will marvel how any man dare climb up to them. 1551, Roger Ascham, letter to Mr. Edward Raven -
(Scotland) smooth; unwrinkled Your bonnie brow was brent. 1828, Robert Burns, John Anderson
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