Definition
Plural of bravo in some contexts; armed men or soldiers employed as mercenaries or bodyguards, especially in Renaissance Italy.
Etymology
Plural of bravo (from Italian and Spanish bravo, meaning fierce/wild); historically referred to hired swordsmen or professional fighters.
Kelly Says
The bravi of Renaissance Milan were so notorious for violence that they inspired the entire literary genre of 'robber-baron' stories—Manzoni's novel 'The Betrothed' features them as antagonists terrorizing the countryside.
Translations
AMአማርኛ
በረታነት ያላቸው
bäräta net yalacʰew
BNবাংলা
সাহসী লোক
sahasi lok
CACatalà
valents
bəˈlɛnts
CSČeština
odvážní
ˈodvaːʒniː
DEDeutsch
tapfere
taˈpfeːʁə
ELΕλληνικά
τολμηροί
dolmīroí
GUGU
સાહસી લોકો
sāhasī lokō
HAHA
masu kishin
maːsu kiʃin
HIहिन्दी
साहसी लोग
sāhasī log
IDBahasa Indonesia
orang berani
oˈɾaŋ bəˈrani
IGIG
ịdị ngọ ndị
iː di ŋɡo ndi
KKKK
ерек адамдар
erék adamdar
KMKM
មនុស្សក្លាហាន
mɔnuh kliəhaan
KO한국어
용기있는 사람
yong-gi issneun saram
MRMR
साहसी लोक
sāhasī lok
MSBahasa Melayu
orang berani
oˈɾaŋ bəˈrani
MYမြန်မာ
ရဲရင့်သော လူများ
yei yaṅ saʊ lu mya
NLNederlands
dappere mensen
ˈdɑpərə ˈmɛnsən
PAPA
ਸਾਹਸੀ ਲੋਕ
sāhasī lok
PLPolski
odważni
ɔdˈvaʐɲi
PTPortuguês
bravos
ˈbɾavus
RUРусский
храбрые
xraˈbrɨje
SVSvenska
modiga
muˈdiːɡa
SWKiswahili
wanaotimiza
waˈna.o.ti.mi.za
TAதமிழ்
வீரர்கள்
vīrarkaḷ
TEతెలుగు
ధైర్యవంతులు
dhairyavantulu
THไทย
ผู้กล้าหาญ
pʰûː klāh̄āṇ
TLTL
mga matapang
maˈɡa maˈtaːpaŋ
TRTürkçe
cesur insanlar
dʒeˈsʊɾ ɪnsanlaɾ
UKУкраїнська
хоробрі
khorobri
VITiếng Việt
người dũng cảm
ŋư̄̀ɔi zuŋ˧˦ kɨəm˧˧
ZUZU
abathandwa
abathandwa