What is a brown study?
The term "Brown Study" is the British term of the fourteenth century, which began to mean a dark melancholic mood, but later meant a state of thinking about something deeply. Before these two words were sometimes commonly used together in the language, Brown was used to describe something dark and sober while he was in the study, meant dreaming. It is said that in today's language it is outdated.
The term "toasted" is related to brown study and is now commonly used in Britain. Like "brown shames", the glow -colored was also more associated with sadness or depression in its earlier use, but then the meaning changed. Today, be brownish, means being poisoned or poisoning someone or something. For example, a toasted brown could be used to describe the attitude of protesters or staff on a strike. For example, Grace S. Richmond Brown Study , published in 1919, even has a chapter entitled "Brown's brown study" written about the character named Donald Brown, which as a result of his brown UV studyIt is not to afford to lose any of his "happy hours" because he had not so much hours in his life, that he would be happy. Richmond's use of this concept is closer to its original meaning, because the disaster is given in relation to it and not just deep thinking.
On the other hand, Arthur Conan Doyle in the Adventure of the Cardboard box published in 1893 uses the later importance of Brown Study, although the book was published long before Richmond. For example, Watson says readers "He leaned back to my chair, I fell into a brown study." Holmes proves the Watson that he could tell what Watson's "thought train" was. Holmes will surprise Watson by rightly guessing that Watson's "Reverrie" was about placing a picture on the wall. Doyle's use of the term like thinking fits into a later sense of deep thinking, yet he also uses an older idea of a verbal study that means dreaming.