2 entries found for
embrace.
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Main Entry:
1em·brace 
Pronunciation:
im-
br
s
Function:
verb
Inflected Form(s):
em·braced;
em·brac·ing
Etymology: early French
embracer "to hug, embrace," literally, "to put into the two arms," from
em- "into" and
brace "two arms," derived from Latin
bracchium "arm" --related to
1BRACE,
BRACELET
1 : to clasp in the arms
: HUG2 : to enclose on all sides <low hills
embraced the valley>
3 a : to take up readily or gladly <
embrace a cause>
b : to make use of
: WELCOME <
embrace an opportunity>
4 : TAKE IN 4, include
-
em·brace·able 
/
-
br
-s
-b
l/
adjective -
em·brac·er nounWord History One of the meanings of the English word
brace is "two of a kind," as in "a brace of quail." In early French, however, the word
brace, from which we get our English words
brace and
embrace, had a more limited meaning of "two arms." The early French
brace came from the plural form of the Latin word
bracchium, meaning "arm." When combined with the early French prefix
em-, meaning "to put into," the word formed the verb
embracer, which meant literally "to put into the two arms"; in other words, "to hug." In time the word was borrowed into English and became
embrace.