Breech vs Bretch - What's the difference?
breech | bretch |
* 1624 , John Smith, Generall Historie , in Kupperman 1988, p. 157:
* 1736 , Alexander Pope, Bounce to Fop :
* 1749 , , Book III ch viii
*:"Oho!" says Thwackum, "you will not! then I will have it out of your br—h ;" that being the place to which he always applied for information on every doubtful occasion.
The part of a cannon or other firearm behind the chamber.
(nautical) The external angle of knee timber, the inside of which is called the throat.
A breech birth.
With the hips coming out before the head.
Born, or having been born, breech.
(dated) To dress in breeches. (especially) To dress a boy in breeches or trousers for the first time.
* 1748-1832 , Jeremy Bentham, The Works of Jeremy Bentham, Volume 10 :
* Macaulay
(dated) To beat or spank on the buttocks.
To fit or furnish with a breech.
To fasten with breeching.
(poetic, transitive, obsolete) To cover as if with breeches.
* Shakespeare
As nouns the difference between breech and bretch
is that breech is while bretch is .As an adverb breech
is with the hips coming out before the head.As an adjective breech
is born, or having been born, breech.As a verb breech
is (dated|transitive) to dress in breeches (especially) to dress a boy in breeches or trousers for the first time.breech
English
Noun
- And he made a woman for playing the whore, sit upon a great stone, on her bare breech twenty-foure houres, onely with corne and water, every three dayes, till nine dayes were past [...].
- When pamper'd Cupids'', bestly ''Veni's'', / And motly, squinting ''Harvequini's , / Shall lick no more their Lady's Br— , / But die of Looseness, Claps, or Itch; / Fair Thames from either ecchoing Shoare / Shall hear, and dread my manly Roar.
Adverb
(-)Adjective
(-)Derived terms
* breech birth * rod for one's own breechVerb
- it occurred before I was breeched , and I was breeched at three years and a quarter old;
- A great man anxious to know whether the blacksmith's youngest boy was breeched .
- to breech a gun
- Their daggers unmannerly breeched with gore.