| 1. | a number of young produced or hatched at one time; a family of offspring or young. |
| 2. | a breed, species, group, or kind: The museum exhibited a brood of monumental sculptures. |
| 3. | to sit upon (eggs) to hatch, as a bird; incubate. |
| 4. | (of a bird) to warm, protect, or cover (young) with the wings or body. |
| 5. | to think or worry persistently or moodily about; ponder: He brooded the problem. |
| 6. | to sit upon eggs to be hatched, as a bird. |
| 7. | to dwell on a subject or to meditate with morbid persistence (usually fol. by over or on). |
| 8. | kept for breeding: a brood hen. |
| 9. | brood above or over, to cover, loom, or seem to fill the atmosphere or scene: The haunted house on the hill brooded above the village. |
brood (brōōd) n.
v. tr.
[Middle English, from Old English brōd; see bhreu- in Indo-European roots.] brood'ing·ly adv. Synonyms: These verbs mean to turn over in the mind moodily and at length: brooding about his decline in popularity; dwelled on her defeat; fretted over the loss of his job; moping about his illness; stewing over her upcoming trial; worrying about the unpaid bills. See Also Synonyms at flock1. |
brood (br&oomacr;d)
n.
See litter.