briefly
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
brief/briːf/
▶adjective
- 1 of short duration.
- 2 concise; using few words.
- 3 (of clothing) not covering much of the body.
- 1 Brit. a summary of the facts and legal points in a case given to a barrister to argue in court.
■ a piece of work for a barrister.
■ N. Amer. a written statement of the facts and legal points supporting one side of a case, for presentation to a court.
- 2 Brit. informal a solicitor or barrister.
- 3 chiefly Brit. a set of instructions given to a person about a task.
- 4 a letter from the Pope on a matter of discipline.
■ Brit. instruct (a barrister) by brief.
– phrases
hold a brief for Brit. be retained as counsel for.
hold no brief for Brit. not support.
in brief in short.
hold a brief for Brit. be retained as counsel for.
hold no brief for Brit. not support.
in brief in short.
– derivatives
briefer noun
briefly adverb,
briefness noun.
briefer noun
briefly adverb,
briefness noun.
– origin ME: from OFr. brief, from L. brevis ‘short’; the noun is via late L. breve ‘note, dispatch’.
'briefly' also found in these Oxford entries:
appearance
- baked Alaska
- base
- blanch
- bob
- brief
- clap
- dip
- drop
- faint
- fiasco
- flambé
- flash
- flash-fry
- flicker
- genuflect
- glimpse
- glissé
- impulse
- indicate
- lyric
- mention
- momently
- nod
- passing
- pouchong
- prick
- residual current
- run
- run-up
- scald
- short
- shortly
- sight
- skate
- skim
- spell
- stop
- succinct
- sum
- touch
- tout court
- whiff
- word

