Word
Of
The
Day
brazen
brazen \BRAY-zun\
adjective
Brazen describes someone who is acting, or something that is done, in a very open and shocking way without shame or embarrassment.
// The opposition party’s campaign has not been shy in assailing the
brazen corruption of the incumbent for funneling public funds into private
coffers.
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Examples:
“There are no coyotes on Block Island. However, they have a presence in all of Rhode Island’s other communities. ... This all makes sense, because Rhode Island, for the most part, is a heavily wooded area. Furthermore, rabbits, berries, mice and voles are in plentiful supply; add to this a burgeoning population, eventually food may become an issue. This is where the clever coyote is perhaps becoming more
brazen and bold while hunting for food in certain neighborhoods.” — J. V. Houlihan,
The Block Island (Rhode Island) Times, 30 Jan. 2026
Did you know?
The oldest meaning of
brazen, which traces back to the Old English word for “
brass,”
bræs, is a literal one: “made of brass” (you might on occasion encounter “brazen cups” or “brazen doors” in something you’re reading). Over the centuries,
brazen picked up a number of figurative senses stemming from the physical properties of brass, from its strength to its sound to its color, as when poet
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow wrote of “The glory that the wood receives, / At sunset, in its brazen leaves.” But it’s the hardness of brass that led eventually to the now common “shameless” meaning of
brazen. Consider this passage written by the minister Thomas Doolittle in the late 1600s: “... though thinkest it no shame, or if thou dost, thou has a face of brass ... and blushest not ...” A face of brass, or a “brazen face” (a phrase recorded in writing as early as the late 1500s) is one that is more or less immobile, betraying no sign of shame of wrongdoing. Today,
brazen is used not just for people who are openly shameless or disrespectful, but for openly shameless or disrespectful behavior, as in “a brazen disregard for the rules.”