Definition of Bruch

1. Noun. German composer (1838-1920).

Exact synonyms: Max Bruch
Generic synonyms: Composer

Lexicographical Neighbors of Bruch

Brownists
Brownite
Brownites
Brownrigg
Brownshirt
Brownshirts
Brownsville
Bruce
Bruce Lee
Bruce effect
Brucella canis
Brucella suis
Brucellaceae
Bruceploitation
Bruces
Bruch (current term)
Bruch's glands
Bruch's membrane
Bruchidae
Bruchus
Bruchus pisorum
Bruck's disease
Brucke's muscle
Brucke's tunic
Brucke-Bartley phenomenon
Bruckenthalia
Bruckenthalia spiculifolia
Bruckner
Brudzinski's sign
Bruegel

Literary usage of Bruch

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. A German-English dictionary of terms used in medicine and the allied sciences by Hugo Lang, Bertram Abrahams (1905)
"-pforte Bruch-pflaster, n. plaster for a hernia Bruch-pforte, /. or -ring, m. aperture through which a hernia passes Bruch- ..."

2. The Scientific Monthly by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1922)
"Workers showing polymorphism and male, photographed to the same scale as the four smaller workers. (Photograph by Dr. Carlos Bruch.) FIG. ..."

3. History of the War in the Peninsula and in the South of France, from the by Sir William Francis Patrick Napier (1842)
"Operations in Catalonia — General Swartz marches against the town of Manresa, and General Chabran against Tarragona — French defeated at Bruch — Chabran ..."

4. Masters of German Music by John Alexander Fuller-Maitland (1894)
"MAX Bruch IT is not easy to estimate the exact distance which separates him whom the wisest critics call the greatest of living German composers from the ..."

5. Catalogue of the Birds in the British Museum by Richard Bowdler Sharpe, British Museum (Natural History). Dept. of Zoology (1896)
"Mus., Anseres, p. 170 (1844) ; id. Gen. B. iii. p. 654 (1846) ; his correspondence with Bruch, hod proposed that name ; but Bruch was the * Often cited ns ..."

6. The Standard Cantatas: Their Stories, Their Music, and Their Composers : a by George Putnam Upton (1887)
"JAX Bruch, one of the most successful choral composers of the present time, was born at Cologne, Jan. 6, 1838. His father was a government official, ..."

7. Manual of the Mosses of North America by Leo Lesquereux, Thomas Potts James (1884)
"B. acuta, Bruch & Schimp. Tufts olive or yellowish green; plants variable in size, one to f,fteen cm long, the slender stem mostly naked in the lower part. ..."

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