British spelling of breveted; past tense of brevet, meaning to have granted a brevet commission.
British variant of 'breveted' with doubled 't' before the '-ed' suffix, following British conventions for words ending in stressed short vowels (like 'committed' or 'occurred').
British and American English differ on this word—Brits double the 't' while Americans don't, which is the same pattern they use for words like 'traveling' (American) versus 'travelling' (British).
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