Synonym: barbarian, coarse, cruel, curt, savage. Similar words: brush, in truth, put away, put aside, cut across, put across, at all, talk. Meaning: ['bruːtl] adj. 1. (of weapons or instruments) causing suffering and pain 2. (of persons or their actions) able or disposed to inflict pain or suffering.
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91. Her aim was to avenge the brutal treatment of comrades in police custody.
92. Colours were brutal and depressing; dank shades like dung and army-blanket fawn.
93. But the most brutal episode occurred at the Cite Herault, a residential suburb.
94. There was a brutal note in his voice that puzzled me.
95. The clamp down became more brutal: opposition activists were attacked by hit squads and six key opposition leaders were rounded up.
96. Convicted murderers, especially brutal and disgusting ones, were followed around by as many paparazzi as the royal family.
97. But be warned: The battle scenes are as fierce and brutal as the reality of bladed warfare.
98. The crime was extremely brutal, as was Ferguson's treatment of his crew, and he received the death sentence.
99. Though around Jessica he remained at least somewhat aloof, Kip could be brutal(sentencedict.com), especially when cornered.
100. The brutal destruction of an entire village was one of the worst atrocities of the Vietnam war.
101. Without a text to assist them they may prevaricate too long before facing the brutal truth.
102. That is why she is kept in her place, if necessary by the most brutal oppression.
103. Historians note that some Indian tribes were brutal in the extreme.
104. Attack and reprisal-increasingly barbaric and brutal by turn-have marked the conflict since then.
105. As for the politicians, they are almost as brutal as their predecessors of an earlier age.
106. Later, people spend hours reconstructing that brutal transition from the nowhere to the everywhere, when nature can destroy you.
107. Compared with the early brutal and bloody encounters, the military action was relatively swift and effective.
108. Equally, the most brutal and aggressive member of staff is often most admired by the inmates as well as being most deeply hated.
109. The rate of departure was probably even more brutal among those at home with a remote control in their hands.
110. As Crabbe describes him, Grimes begins as a brutal product of harsh circumstances.
111. She looked up at him expectantly, her mouth open, the bottom lip raised, almost brutal in what it implied.
112. It links Hammersmith Broadway with the brutal concrete-and-steel Thirties exhibition halls at Olympia.
113. They particularly enjoy dealing with Orcs as it gives them a chance to outwit their larger and more brutal cousins.
114. Filmgoers, unfortunately,[http://sentencedict.com] are subjected to the unnecessary trauma of seeing the brutal crime depicted from arty camera angles.
115. Then came the Black Death and a brutal, catastrophic decline.
116. The brutal suppression of the insurrection of the early 1980s was not an isolated incident.
117. Basketball offered an intimacy and an aesthetic on television lacking in the brutal National Football League or the technical and leisurely baseball.
118. It was the old mountain teaching another brutal lesson, that the mountain and its weather does not forgive a mistake.
119. Mr Purohit, a leading figure in the Hindu community, had been murdered, in a brutal attack.
120. The street battles of Vilnius and Riga show a brutal determination to keep the Soviet empire together.