officer under the eastern empire, whose business it was to write and translate briefs.βAt Rome those are styled breviators, or abbreviators, who dictate and draw up the pope's briefs.
Brevibus, a rotulis liberandis, a writ or command to a sheriff to deliver to his successor the county, with the appurtenances, and the rolls, writs, and other things to his office belonging.
Brevier, among printers, a small kind of type or letter between bourgeois and minion.
Brevity, in a general sense, that which denominates a thing brief or short.
Brevity is more particularly used in speaking of the style or composition of discourse. Brevity of discourse is by some called brachylogia and breviloquientia; sometimes laconicus. Tacitus and Persius are remarkable for the brevity of their style. There are two kinds of brevity, one arising from dryness, poverty, and narrowness of genius; the other from judgment and reflection; which latter alone is laudable. Brevity is essential to a tale, a song, and an epigram, that without it they necessarily languish and become dull. Rhetoricians make brevity one of the principal marks Brevity or conditions of eloquence: but the rules they prescribe for attaining it are difficult to apply, so as still to keep the due medium between too much and too little. A just brevity is attained by using all the words which are necessary, and none but those which are necessary. Sometimes it may also be had, by choosing a word which has the force of several. It is this last kind which Quintilian admires so much in Sallust; and the imitation of which, by other writers, has caused so much obscurity.