breast

[brest] /brɛst/
noun
1.
Anatomy, Zoology. (in bipeds) the outer, front part of the thorax, or the front part of the body from the neck to the abdomen; chest.
2.
Zoology. the corresponding part in quadrupeds.
3.
either of the pair of mammae occurring on the chest in humans and having a discrete areola around the nipple, especially the mammae of the female after puberty, which are enlarged and softened by hormonally influenced mammary-gland development and fat deposition and which secrete milk after the birth of a child: the breasts of males normally remain rudimentary.
4.
the part of a garment that covers the chest.
5.
the bosom conceived of as the center of emotion:
What anger lay in his breast when he made that speech?
6.
a projection from a wall, as part of a chimney.
7.
any surface or part resembling or likened to the human breast.
8.
Mining. the face or heading at which the work is going on.
9.
Metallurgy.
  1. the front of an open-hearth furnace.
  2. the clay surrounding the taphole of a cupola.
10.
Nautical.
  1. breast line.
  2. a rounded bow.
verb (used with object)
11.
to meet or oppose boldly; confront:
As a controversial public figure he has breasted much hostile criticism.
12.
to contend with or advance against:
The ship breasted the turbulent seas.
13.
to climb or climb over (a mountain, obstacle, etc.).
14.
to overcome, succeed against.
15.
to come alongside or abreast of.
Verb phrases
16.
breast in, Nautical. to bind (an object, as a boatswain's chair) securely under a projection, as the flare of a bow.
17.
breast off, Nautical.
  1. to thrust (a vessel) sideways from a wharf.
  2. to keep (a vessel) away from a wharf by means of timbers.
Idioms
18.
beat one's breast, to display one's grief, remorse, etc., in a loud and demonstrative manner.
19.
make a clean breast of, to confess everything (of which one is guilty):
You'll feel better if you make a clean breast of it.
Origin
before 1000; Middle English brest, Old English brēost; cognate with Old Norse brjōst; akin to German Brust, Gothic brusts, Dutch borst
Related forms
breastless, adjective
Examples from the web for breast
  • Screening mammography is used for the early detection of breast cancer.
  • Malignancies, including colorectal, esophageal, breast, and lung cancer.
  • Dull green above, with yellowish supercilium, throat, breast and faint wing bar.
  • Many of her works were self portraits about her own fight with breast cancer.
  • The long neck, breast and belly are pale brown with dark bars on the breast and flanks.
  • First, the breast area is locally anesthetized with a small amount of anesthetic fluid.
  • This article deals with the human breast for other animals, see udder and mammary gland.
  • Statistically it is slightly more common for the left breast to be the larger.
  • breast hypoplasia is a condition where one or both breasts fail to develop.
  • Health to promote good breast health it is important to take certain steps.
British Dictionary definitions for breast

breast

/brɛst/
noun
1.
the front part of the body from the neck to the abdomen; chest
2.
either of the two soft fleshy milk-secreting glands on the chest in sexually mature human females adjective mammary
3.
a similar organ in certain other mammals
4.
anything that resembles a breast in shape or position: the breast of the hill
5.
a source of nourishment: the city took the victims to its breast
6.
the source of human emotions
7.
the part of a garment that covers the breast
8.
a projection from the side of a wall, esp that formed by a chimney
9.
(mining) the face being worked at the end of a tunnel
10.
beat one's breast, to display guilt and remorse publicly or ostentatiously
11.
make a clean breast of, to make a confession of
verb (transitive)
12.
to confront boldly; face: breast the storm
13.
to oppose with the breast or meet at breast level: breasting the waves
14.
to come alongside of: breast the ship
15.
to reach the summit of: breasting the mountain top
Word Origin
Old English brēost; related to Old Norse brjōst, Old High German brust, Dutch borst, Swedish bräss, Old Irish brū belly, body
Word Origin and History for breast
n.

Old English breost "breast, bosom; mind, thought, disposition," from Proto-Germanic *breustam "breast" (cf. Old Saxon briost, Old Frisian briast, Old Norse brjost, Dutch borst, German brust, Gothic brusts), perhaps literally "swelling" and from PIE root *bhreus- "to swell, sprout" (cf. Middle Irish bruasach "having a broad, strong chest," Old Irish bruinne "breast"). The spelling conforms to the Scottish and northern England dialectal pronunciation. Figurative sense of "seat of the emotions" was in Old English.

breast in Medicine

breast (brěst)
n.

  1. Either of two milk-secreting, glandular organs on the chest of a woman; mammary gland; mamma.

  2. A corresponding rudimentary gland in the male.

  3. The superior ventral surface of the human body, extending from the neck to the abdomen.

Idioms and Phrases with breast