brief
verb/briːf/
/briːf/
Verb Forms
| present simple I / you / we / they brief | /briːf/ /briːf/ |
| he / she / it briefs | /briːfs/ /briːfs/ |
| past simple briefed | /briːft/ /briːft/ |
| past participle briefed | /briːft/ /briːft/ |
| -ing form briefing | /ˈbriːfɪŋ/ /ˈbriːfɪŋ/ |
- to give somebody information about something so that they are prepared to deal with it
- brief somebody I expect to be kept fully briefed at all times.
- brief somebody on/about something The officer briefed her on what to expect.
- Each member of my crew took it in turn to brief me on his particular duties.
- We have all been fully briefed about the mission.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- fully
- properly
- well
- …
- about
- on
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- brief somebody (to do something) (British English, law) to give a lawyer, especially a barrister, the main facts of a legal case so that it can be argued in courtTopics Law and justicec2
Word OriginMiddle English: from Old French brief, from Latin brevis ‘short’. The noun is via late Latin breve ‘note, dispatch’, hence ‘an official letter’.
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brief