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brass hat
noun
- a person in a high position, especially a top-ranking army or navy officer.
brass hat
noun
- informal.a top-ranking official, esp a military officer
Word History and Origins
Origin of brass hat1
Word History and Origins
Origin of brass hat1
Idioms and Phrases
A high-ranking official, as in All the brass bats were invited to the sales conference . The terms big brass, top brass, and the brass all refer to high officials considered as a group. For example, John's one of the top brass in town—he's superintendent of schools . The origin of this term is disputed. Most authorities believe it originated in the late 19th-century British army, when senior officers had gold leaves on their cap brims. Another theory is that it referred to the cocked hat worn by Napoleon and his officers, which they folded and carried under the arm when indoors. In French these were called chapeaux à bras (“hats in arms”), a term the British are supposed to have anglicized as brass . By World War I brass hat referred to a high-ranking officer in Britain and America, and in World War II it was joined by the other brass phrases. After the war these terms began to be used for the top executives in business and other organizations.Example Sentences
But the general revulsion to the war, imagining it as a pointless mass murder conducted by bone-headed brass hats, really began some 10 years later.
BAE Systems, a defence concern, has a separate American board stacked with former brass hats.
And so it happened, for about five o'clock there was a clinking of spurs in the passage, and the matron ushered in an affable brass hat and a very charming lady.
Helen knew more about the life of the army in Flanders than the "brass hats," the staff and all the war correspondents.
But how can a staff officer find the chance his soul yearns for, to show his mettle—except the metal on his expensive "brass hat"?
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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