
ETYMOLOGY
from en- + braid (to upbraid, to reproach);
possibly aphetic from abraid (to upbraid)
EXAMPLE
“… No besynes of famylyar thynges shal agayn your wyll departe you from suche plesaunt ydelnes, for I truste to oure goddes that my lytil feelde, of the which I am enbrayded by Corneli, shal suffise for our dayly lyvelode. …”
From: Gaius Flaminius refutes Publius Cornelius, his Rival for the Hand of Lucretia
In Tully of Old Age and Friendship
Translated by William Caxton, 1481