0 completely new, especially not yet used: --
1 completely new, esp. not used before: --
2 recently created, or not yet used: --
a brand-new car
brand new businesses
The flag itself looked brand new.
Don't start with brand new material.
On the other hand, it should be noted that foreign-owned companies generally build brand new plants, and working conditions tend to be better than in similar national plants.
In the view of the most prominent critics, a brand new apparatus with no ties to the authoritarian past should have been set up.
In other words, different implementations even of the same domain will require different tunings of the widening operators (or even, possibly, brand new widenings).
All the talk of a brand new telematic world masks the everincreasing polarisation of resources and means, in which women are the main losers.
Building a brand new theory in physics is certainly more demanding than changing a paradigm within the theory.
Had they been trying to follow up on the fast-expanding literature of the last years, they write, a brand new article would have been required.