How to Use brassiere in a Sentence

brassiere

noun
  • Somewhat less common is the use of old plus-size brassieres.
    The Washington Post, The Denver Post, 2 June 2017
  • Her grandmother pulled $100 from her brassiere as a gift.
    Helen Ubiñas, Philly.com, 10 Apr. 2018
  • One young man cuts away a large section of the artist’s top before severing the straps of her brassiere.
    New York Times, 15 Oct. 2020
  • Try wearing your black brassiere on top of your Burberry duffle coat, and get back to me.
    Michael Avedon, Harper's BAZAAR, 28 Aug. 2017
  • In the living room, dressed in underwear — bikini panties and a brassiere — was Miss Tate.
    Los Angeles Times, 28 July 2019
  • Of course, Jenner does wear brassieres, as showcased by this photo, of her out in New York in 2016.
    Donna Freydkin, Allure, 31 July 2017
  • Nineteen days later, a quail hunter found her body clad only in a brassiere, face down among trees off Foresthill Road east of Auburn.
    Cathy Locke, sacbee, 25 Oct. 2017
  • His work has appeared on everything from cat food labels (of course) to jigsaw puzzles to ads for brassieres.
    Taylor Glascock, WIRED, 2 Oct. 2015
  • When a soldier is in harm’s way, the brassiere would be worn under a nearly invincible fortress of finery.
    Patricia Marx, The New Yorker, 19 June 2023
  • Depression sounded like a blues woman who kept switchblades in her garters, flasks in her brassiere and whiskey on her tongue (or gin, depending on the day).
    Maiysha Kai, The Root, 16 May 2018
  • From bricks to brassieres to beer, Lake Bluff has produced a variety of products, from the practical to whimsical over more than 150 years.
    Lake County News-Sun, 14 May 2018
  • The Current Detective magazine cover from June 1944 shows a woman in a brassiere.
    Siobhan Morrissey, miamiherald, 9 June 2017
  • The event is free, but those who donate $15 to the fund will receive a copy of the book, which continues the story of a midlife wife who loses her brassiere-manufacturer husband to a model but finds new love and a new life.
    Carole Goldberg, courant.com, 14 Mar. 2018
  • Dermatologists agree that women can get away with washing their brassieres after every three or four wears.
    Southern Living, 2 May 2018
  • Around midnight in Lausanne, hundreds rallied at the city's cathedral and marched downtown to set wooden pallets on fire, then throwing items like neckties and brassieres onto the inferno.
    CBS News, 14 June 2019
  • Until the modern invention of the brassiere with cups, women had to bolster their busts with either unsupportive bands of cloth or constricting corsets---so the common knowledge went.
    Sophie Bushwick, Discover Magazine, 19 July 2012
  • Just visible under a much-unbuttoned cornflower-blue blouse is a lace brassiere that, in context, reads more like medieval armature than an erotic statement.
    Phoebe Eaton, Harper's BAZAAR, 23 Mar. 2011
  • Rayburn, a satirist, had written a previous book about the putative (and non-existent) inventor of the brassiere, Otto Titzling, leading many to believe that Crapper had never existed.
    Kat Eschner, Smithsonian, 28 Sep. 2017

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'brassiere.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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