Dictionary
bris•tle
Pronunciation: (bris'ul), [key]
—n., v., -tled, -tling.
—
n.
1. one of the short, stiff, coarse hairs of certain animals, esp. hogs, used extensively in making brushes.
2. anything resembling these hairs.
—
v.i.
1. to stand or rise stiffly, like bristles.
2. to erect the bristles, as an irritated animal (often fol. by
up):
The hog bristled up.
3. to become rigid with anger or irritation:
The man bristled when I asked him to move.
4. to be thickly set or filled with something suggestive of bristles:
The plain bristled with bayonets. The project bristled with difficulties.
5. to be visibly roused or stirred (usually fol. by
up).
—
v.t.
1. to erect like bristles:
The rooster bristled his crest.
2. to furnish with a bristle or bristles.
3. to make bristly.
Random House Unabridged Dictionary, Copyright © 1997, by Random House, Inc., on Infoplease.