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Broom   /brum/   Listen
Broom

noun
1.
A cleaning implement for sweeping; bundle of straws or twigs attached to a long handle.
2.
Any of various shrubs of the genera Cytisus or Genista or Spartium having long slender branches and racemes of yellow flowers.
3.
Common Old World heath represented by many varieties; low evergreen grown widely in the northern hemisphere.  Synonyms: Calluna vulgaris, heather, ling, Scots heather.
verb
1.
Sweep with a broom or as if with a broom.  Synonym: sweep.  "Sweep under the bed"
2.
Finish with a broom.



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"Broom" Quotes from Famous Books



... shabby piano at home, kicked below by many childish feet, but mellow and sweet, like an old violin, and herself sitting practising, over and over, that part of Paderewski's Minuet where, as every one knows, the fingering is rather difficult, and outside the open window, leaning on his broom, worthless Johnny Fraser, staring in with friendly eyes and an extremely dirty face. To Twenty-two's unbounded amazement she flung down the cushion and made for the little ...
— Love Stories • Mary Roberts Rinehart

... an apron; there was a broom in his hand, and as he came towards her, walking very, very slowly, there came over Nancy Dampier, she could not have told you why, a touch of repulsion ...
— The End of Her Honeymoon • Marie Belloc Lowndes

... himself, as with shovel and broom he cleared the path in the court-yard, and shovelled the kitchen steps clean. He did it so well that his father tossed him some pennies—for he was saving up to buy Blinky a collar—and he turned off with a light heart for school, with Blinky ...
— Harper's Young People, January 20, 1880 - An Illustrated Weekly • Various

... the woods, and the time comes for others besides the squire's guests to take their education in hand, and teach pheasants at least that they are no native British birds. These are a wild set, living scattered about the wild country; turf-cutters, broom-makers, squatters, with indefinite occupations, and nameless habits, a race hated of keepers and constables. These have increased and flourished of late years; and, notwithstanding the imprisonments and transportations which deprive them periodically of the ...
— Tom Brown at Oxford • Thomas Hughes

... about, it was such a very exasperating one all around. One thing after another happened to make things go wrong, till it fairly seemed as if some evil genius had affairs under control. The door opened and a sweet round face, framed by a sweeping cap, appeared. A graceful young girl armed with broom and dustpan stepped lightly across the kitchen, deposited her broom in the corner, and proceeded to empty the contents of the pan in ...
— Divers Women • Pansy and Mrs. C.M. Livingston


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