butcher's broom in English

noun
1
a low evergreen Eurasian shrub of the lily family, with flat shoots that give the appearance of stiff, spine-tipped leaves.
In this study, using a butcher's broom / sweet clover cream, the swelling of the injured leg measured against the uninjured leg was significantly reduced.

Use "butchers broom" in a sentence

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1. (C17: from French, from Italian brusco sour, rough, from Medieval Latin Bruscus butcher's broom) ♦ brusquely adv

2. C17: from French, from Italian brusco sour, rough, from Medieval Latin Bruscus butcher's broom Examples of 'brusque' in a sentence brusque

3. Butcher's broom is commonly taken by mouth for symptoms of poor blood circulation, such as pain, leg cramps, leg swelling, varicose

4. The Italian term came from Bruscus, the Medieval Latin name for butcher's-broom, a shrub whose bristly twigs were used to make brooms

5. [French, lively, fierce, from Italian brusco, coarse, rough, from Late Latin brūscum, perhaps blend of Latin rūscus, butcher's broom, and Late Latin brūcus, heather; see briar1 .] Brusque…

6. Origin of Brusque First recorded in 1595–1605; from Middle French, from Italian brusco “rough, tart,” special use of brusco (noun) “butcher's broom,” from Late Latin brūscum, for Latin rūscus, rūscum, …

7. Brusque (adj.) in older use also brusk, "abrupt in manner, rude," 1650s, from French Brusque "lively, fierce," from Italian adjective brusco "sharp, tart, rough," perhaps from Vulgar Latin *bruscum "butcher's broom plant," from Late Latin brucus "heather," from Gaulish *bruko-(compare Breton brug "heath," Old Irish froech).Related: Brusquely; Brusqueness.

8. Brusque (adj.) in older use also brusk, "abrupt in manner, rude," 1650s, from French brusque "lively, fierce," from Italian adjective brusco "sharp, tart, rough," perhaps from Vulgar Latin *bruscum "butcher's broom plant," from Late Latin brucus "heather," from Gaulish *bruko-(compare Breton brug "heath," Old Irish froech).Related: Brusquely; Brusqueness.