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brausen

Brausen is a German verb that denotes the act of foaming, roiling, or surging, and is commonly used to describe natural phenomena such as waves, wind, or water, as well as the intensity of weather or liquids. It can also be used metaphorically to describe strong emotional outbursts or rising agitation. The form is predominantly intransitive, often appearing with subjects like the sea, the wind, or a storm.

The sense of the word frequently appears in nautical or meteorological contexts. For example, the sea brauste

Usage notes and nuance: brausen implies a forceful, conspicuous movement or reaction, whether physical or emotional.

Etymology and related forms: brausen is of Germanic origin and has cognates in related Germanic languages.

Overall, brausen is a concise term for depicting vigorous, often tumultuous movement or emotion, most commonly

against
the
rocks,
the
wind
brauste
through
the
trees,
and
the
waves
brausten
vor
der
Küste.
In
describing
human
emotion,
brausen
can
appear
with
prefixes
such
as
auf-,
forming
aufbrausen,
to
convey
that
someone
or
something
is
suddenly
surging
with
anger
or
excitement,
as
in
jemandem
vor
Wut
aufbrausen.
It
tends
to
appear
in
written
or
descriptive
prose,
and
may
carry
a
somewhat
literary
or
emphatic
tone
compared
with
more
common
verbs
like
toben
or
toben
for
storminess.
A
prefixed
variant,
aufbrausen,
specifically
emphasizes
a
surge
or
eruption
that
rises
abruptly,
often
with
a
sense
of
growing
intensity.
tied
to
natural
forces
but
also
applicable
to
intense
personal
reactions.