brimstone means the sulfur of hell; hell, damnation.
brimstone is pronounced /ˈbɹɪmstəʊn/.
Why “brimstone” is a great word
An archaic term for sulfur, now chiefly used in poetic or biblical contexts to evoke hellfire and divine wrath. From Middle English *brymston*, *brimston*, from Old English *brynstān*, literally "burn-stone," from *bryn-* (related to *burn*) + *stān* (stone). Unlike "sulfur," a neutral chemical designation, or "damnation," an abstract theological state, brimstone is the palpable, sensory symbol of that punishment. It is the acrid, yellow reek of a struck match magnified to a divine scale, the choking, blue-tinged fire that rains from a prophet's heaven, and the imagined, eternal fuel of infernal lakes—the tangible substance of an intangible terror.
Etymology
From Middle English brymston, brimston, bremston, forms of brinston, brenston, bernston, from Old English brynstān (“brimstone”, literally “burn-stone”), equivalent to burn + stone. Cognate with Scots brunstane (“brimstone”), Icelandic brennisteinn (“sulfur / sulphur, brimstone”), German Bernstein (“amber”). Compare also brimfire. More at burn, stone. Although once a synonym for sulfur, the word is now largely restricted to poetic and Biblical usage.
noun
- The sulfur of hell; hell, damnation.“For griefe thereof, and diuelish despight, / From his infernall fournace forth he threw / Huge flames, that dimmed all the heauens light, / Enrold in duskish smoke and brimstone blew.”
- Sulfur.“Weel I wot I wad be broken if I were to gie sic weight to the folk that come to buy our pepper and brimstone, and suchlike sweetmeats.”
- A whore.“I went to the park, picked up a low Brimstone, called myself a Barber, & agreed with her for Sixpence, went to the bottom of the park, arm in arm, & dipped my machine in the Canal […].”
- Used attributively as an intensifier in exclamations.“You are a brimstone pig. You're a head of swine!”
- The butterfly Gonepteryx rhamni of the Pieridae family.
- Online content of exceptionally poor quality, lower than coal.
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