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brio

[ US /ˈbɹaɪoʊ/ ]
[ UK /bɹˈiːə‍ʊ/ ]
NOUN
  1. quality of being active or spirited or alive and vigorous

How To Use brio In A Sentence

  • The wives showed themselves true to stereotype by forever cooking meals containing an abundance of chips and driving to shoe shops in Japanese cabriolets.
  • It is for any manufacturer who produces a cabriolet a niche product.
  • Moroccan lamb meatballs, halibut and shrimp cakes with romesco, brioche panini with fontina and truffle oil, roasted pepper and Serrano ham, fried risotto balls, tuna tartare with chermoula on toast, fried polenta with mushroom duxelle. Three Stages of Amazement
  • With the weather turning out to be salubrious for the past few days, fitting well into the celebrative atmosphere, the students could not ask for more.
  • Co.rtesy Loree Rodkin Co. Jessica Biel shows off white-gold and diamond quatrefoil earrings with briolette dangles. Loree Rodkin's Star Studded Jewelry
  • On a smooth track the hard-top S4 handles beautifully, and I have no doubt the cabrio would be similarly impressive, but the price you pay for this is too high and not necessary.
  • While serious in subject and sad in fact, the play is written with brio and excellent humour.
  • A certain lugubrious yarn, "My Graves," was my masterpiece. The Alpine Path: The Story of My Career
  • I called a cabriolet, and the first thing the driver asked was, "Is the Bill carried? Life and Letters of Lord Macaulay Volume 1
  • Whilst the traditional different places of employment obviously differ (from, the smell of the "briny" with a cooking range being pitched up and down with the ship by the waves; to the unwanted inclusion of sand, leaves and insects in the field; to the salubrious comfort of an air base), the core skills, role and esprit must be common throughout the three Services. Army Rumour Service
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