Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary · 1913

Brand

Brand ({not transcribed}) , noun

[Old English brand, brond, Anglo-Saxon brand brond brand, sword, from byrnan, beornan, to burn; akin to Dutch, Danish, Swedish, & German brand brand, Icelandic brandr a brand, blade of a sword. r32. See Burn, transitive verb, and compare Brandish.]

1.
A burning piece of wood; or a stick or piece of wood partly burnt, whether burning or after the fire is extinct.
Snatching a live brand from a wigwam, Mason threw it on a matted roof. — Palfrey
2.
A sword, so called from its glittering or flashing brightness. [Poetic] — Tennyson
Paradise, so late their happy seat, Waved over by that flaming brand. — Milton
3.
A mark made by burning with a hot iron, as upon a cask, to designate the quality, manufacturer, etc., of the contents, or upon an animal, to designate ownership; -- also, a mark for a similar purpose made in any other way, as with a stencil. Hence, figurately: Quality; kind; grade; as, a good brand of flour.
4.
A mark put upon criminals with a hot iron. Hence: Any mark of infamy or vice; a stigma.
The brand of private vice. — Channing
5.
An instrument to brand with; a branding iron.
6.
(Botany) Any minute fungus which produces a burnt appearance in plants. The brands are of many species and several genera of the order Pucciniai.

Brand ({not transcribed}) , transitive verb

1.
To burn a distinctive mark into or upon with a hot iron, to indicate quality, ownership, etc., or to mark as infamous (as a convict).
2.
To put an actual distinctive mark upon in any other way, as with a stencil, to show quality of contents, name of manufacture, etc.
3.
Figuratively: To fix a mark of infamy, or a stigma, upon.
The Inquisition branded its victims with infamy. — Prescott
There were the enormities, branded and condemned by the first and most natural verdict of common humanity. — South
4.
To mark or impress indelibly, as with a hot iron.
As if it were branded on my mind. — Geo. Eliot