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Bristle   /brˈɪsəl/   Listen
Bristle

noun
1.
A stiff fiber (coarse hair or filament); natural or synthetic.
2.
A stiff hair.
verb
(past & past part. bristled; pres. part. bristling)
1.
Be in a state of movement or action.  Synonyms: abound, burst.  "The garden bristled with toddlers"
2.
Rise up as in fear.  Synonyms: stand up, uprise.  "It was a sight to make one's hair uprise!"
3.
Have or be thickly covered with or as if with bristles.
4.
React in an offended or angry manner.



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"Bristle" Quotes from Famous Books



... loin-cloths, nods approval. But Salam's face is a study. In place of contemptuous indifference there is now rising anger, terrible to behold. His brows are knitted, his eyes flame, his beard seems to bristle with rage. The tale of prices is hardly told before, with a series of rapid movements, he has tied every bundle up, and is thrusting the good things back into the hands of their owners. His vocabulary is strained ...
— Morocco • S.L. Bensusan

... physical distaste for Lemoyne. His dark eyes were too liquid; his person was too plump; the bit of black bristle beneath his nose was an offense; his aura——Yet who can say anything definite about so indefinite a thing as an aura, save that one feels it and is attracted or repelled by it? Lemoyne, on his side, developed an equal distaste (or repugnance) for the "little gray man"—as he called ...
— Bertram Cope's Year • Henry Blake Fuller

... Ancient and Hopeful assumes more mystery and importance than ever as he uncovers a second tin casket with a glass front. Glued to the glass, inside, is a single coarse yellow hair about two inches long; the precious relic, which has a suspicious resemblance to a bristle, is considered the gem of the collection, being nothing less than a hair from the Prophet's venerable mustache. Mohammedans swear by the beard of the Prophet, just as good Christians swear by "the great horned spoon," or by "great Caesar's ghost," so that the possession of ...
— Around the World on a Bicycle Volume II. - From Teheran To Yokohama • Thomas Stevens

... a table. On one side was a small painting on a card, which was his model. He was copying this painting in mosaic. The bits of glass that he was working with were in the form of slender bars, not much larger than a stiff bristle. They were of all imaginable colors—the several colors being each kept by itself, in the divisions of a box on the table. The man took up these bars, one by one, and broke off small pieces of them, of the colors that he wanted, with a pair of pincers, and set them into the work. ...
— Rollo in Rome • Jacob Abbott

... examining Orchis pyramidalis, and it almost equals, perhaps even beats, your Listera case; the sticky glands are congenitally united into a saddle-shaped organ, which has great power of movement, and seizes hold of a bristle (or proboscis) in an admirable manner, and then another movement takes place in the pollen masses, by which they are beautifully adapted to leave pollen on the two LATERAL stigmatic surfaces. I never saw ...
— The Life and Letters of Charles Darwin, Volume II • Francis Darwin


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