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Bramley

/ ˈbræmlɪ /

noun

  1. a variety of cooking apple having juicy firm flesh


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Word History and Origins

Origin of Bramley1

C19: named after Matthew Bramley , 19th-century English butcher, said to have first grown it

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Example Sentences

The experiments have dealt with dwarf trees of Bramley, Cox and Potts, six trees of each variety constituting one investigation.

I wrote to you December 29th, and sent you a silk scarf in a parcel that poor Doctor Bramley was sending home to his wife.

From Shalford Common the road runs almost straight to Bramley.

Bramley; which concludes with:—'for with men whaym God drawes to heven thai sal nought be swongen, but with fendes in hell.'

C, Bramley-fall stone base, with a chain of wrought iron let into it.

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