brooding

[broo-ding] /ˈbru dɪŋ/
adjective
1.
preoccupied with depressing, morbid, or painful memories or thoughts:
a brooding frame of mind.
2.
cast in subdued light so as to convey a somewhat threatening atmosphere:
Dusk fell on the brooding hills.
Origin
1810-20 for def 1; 1640-50 for def 2; brood + -ing2
Related forms
broodingly, adverb
nonbrooding, adjective, noun
unbrooding, adjective

brood

[brood] /brud/
noun
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.
verb (used with object)
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.
verb (used without object)
6.
to sit upon eggs to be hatched, as a bird.
7.
to dwell on a subject or to meditate with morbid persistence (usually followed by over or on).
adjective
8.
kept for breeding:
a brood hen.
Verb phrases
9.
brood above/over, to cover, loom, or seem to fill the atmosphere or scene:
The haunted house on the hill brooded above the village.
Origin
before 1000; Middle English; Old English brōd; cognate with Dutch broed, German Brut. See breed
Related forms
broodless, adjective
unbrooded, adjective
Can be confused
brewed, brood (see synonym study at the current entry)
Synonyms
1. Brood, litter refer to young creatures. Brood is especially applied to the young of fowls and birds hatched from eggs at one time and raised under their mother's care: a brood of young turkeys. Litter is applied to a group of young animals brought forth at a birth: a litter of kittens or pups. 2. line, stock, strain.
Examples from the web for brooding
  • His eyes are mystical and brooding.
  • Now the atmosphere is all dark and brooding.
  • For a long time I sat brooding.
  • The novel caught the brooding, anti-establishment mood of the times and became an instant bestseller.
  • As he sat on his terrace brooding, Garbo went about propping him up with pillows and doing what she could to cheer him up.
  • You spend too much time brooding.
  • His eyes were brooding and blue—her favorite combination.
  • And then you go home to a brooding, melancholy presence.
  • In some way this discussion is good, it is much better than hide behind facade of friendship but brooding in private.
  • The sculptor was longing to have his full-length plaster statue of a brooding, majestic Balzac cast in bronze.
British Dictionary definitions for brooding

brood

/bruːd/
noun
1.
a number of young animals, esp birds, produced at one hatching
2.
all the offspring in one family: often used jokingly or contemptuously
3.
a group of a particular kind; breed
4.
(as modifier) kept for breeding: a brood mare
verb
5.
(of a bird)
  1. to sit on or hatch (eggs)
  2. (transitive) to cover (young birds) protectively with the wings
6.
when intr, often foll by on, over or upon. to ponder morbidly or persistently
Derived Forms
brooding, noun, adjective
broodingly, adverb
Word Origin
Old English brōd; related to Middle High German bruot, Dutch broed; see breed
Word Origin and History for brooding
adj.

1640s, "hovering, overhanging" (as a mother bird does her nest), from present participle of brood (v.); meaning "that dwells moodily" first attested 1818 (in "Frankenstein").

n.

"action of incubating," c.1400, verbal noun from brood (v.). Figuratively (of weather, etc.) from 1805; of mental fixations by 1873. Related: Broodingly.

brood

n.

Old English brod "brood, fetus, hatchling," from Proto-Germanic *brod (cf. Middle Dutch broet, Old High German bruot, German Brut "brood"), literally "that which is hatched by heat," from *bro- "to warm, heat," from PIE *bhre- "burn, heat, incubate," from root *bhreue- "to boil, bubble, effervesce, burn" (see brew (v.)).

v.

"sit on eggs, hatch," mid-15c., from brood (n.). The figurative meaning ("to incubate in the mind") is first recorded 1570s, from notion of "nursing" one's anger, resentment, etc. Related: Brooded; brooding.

brooding in Medicine

brood (brōōd)
n.
See litter.

Encyclopedia Article for brooding

in zoology, pattern of behaviour of certain egg-laying animals, especially birds, marked by cessation of egg laying and readiness to sit on and incubate eggs. Incubation (q.v.) itself is the process of maintaining uniform heat and humidity of the developing eggs, usually accomplished by one or both parents sitting on the eggs at all times. Many birds develop a brood patch-an area of bare, featherless skin on the underbody-in preparation for incubation and brooding. A network of blood vessels in the skin of the brood patch raises the temperature locally. After the hatch, the parent birds brood their young, keeping them warm by spreading the feathers out, umbrella-like, so the young can maintain contact with the skin of the adult. In domestic fowl the term "broody hen" refers both to a sitting (incubating) bird and, later, to the same hen brooding her chicks

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