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Origin and history of brio
brio(n.)
"liveliness, vivacity," 1734, from Italian brio "mettle, fire, life," perhaps a shortened derivative of Latin ebrius "drunk." Or via Provençal briu "vigor," from Celtic *brig-o- "strength," from PIE root *gwere- (1) "heavy." Probably it entered English via the musical instruction con brio.
Entries linking to brio
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Trends of brio
adapted from books.google.com/ngrams/ with a 7-year moving average; ngrams are probably unreliable.
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