| 1. | an implement consisting of bristles, hair, or the like, set in or attached to a handle, used for painting, cleaning, polishing, grooming, etc. |
| 2. | one of a pair of devices consisting of long, thin handles with wire bristles attached, used in jazz or dance bands for keeping a soft, rhythmic beat on the trap drums or the cymbals. |
| 3. | the bushy tail of an animal, esp. of a fox. |
| 4. | Electricity.
|
| 5. | a feathery or hairy tuft or tassel, as on the tip of a kernel of grain or on a man's hat. |
| 6. | an act or instance of brushing; application of a brush. |
| 7. | a light, stroking touch. |
| 8. | a brief encounter: He has already had one brush with the law. |
| 9. | a close approach, esp. to something undesirable or harmful: a brush with disaster. |
| 10. | to sweep, paint, clean, polish, etc., with a brush. |
| 11. | to touch lightly in passing; pass lightly over: His lips brushed her ear. |
| 12. | to remove by brushing or by lightly passing over: His hand brushed a speck of lint from his coat. |
| 13. | to move or skim with a slight contact. |
| 14. | brush aside, to disregard; ignore: Our complaints were simply brushed aside. |
| 15. | brush off, to rebuff; send away: She had never been brushed off so rudely before. |
| 16. | brush up on, to revive, review, or resume (studies, a skill, etc.): She's thinking of brushing up on her tennis. Also, brush up. |
| 17. | get the brush, to be rejected or rebuffed: She greeted Jim effusively, but I got the brush. |
| 18. | give the brush, to ignore, rebuff, etc.: If you're still angry with him, give him the brush. |

| 1. | a dense growth of bushes, shrubs, etc.; scrub; thicket. |
| 2. | a pile or covering of lopped or broken branches; brushwood. |
| 3. | bushes and low trees growing in thick profusion, esp. close to the ground. |
| 4. | Also called brushland. land or an area covered with thickly growing bushes and low trees. |
| 5. | backwoods; a sparsely settled wooded region. |

brush
In addition to the idioms beginning with brush, also see give someone the air (brush off); have a brush with; tarred with the same brush.
brush
device composed of natural or synthetic fibres set into a handle that is used for cleaning, grooming, polishing, writing, or painting. Brushes were used by man as early as the Paleolithic Period (began about 2,500,000 years ago) to apply pigment, as shown by the cave paintings of Altamira in Spain and the Perigord in France. In historical times the early Egyptians used brushes to create their elaborate tomb paintings, while the ancient Chinese employed the tip of a long-haired brush to make the many intricate characters of their writing, a practice continued in the Orient today.
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