From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishbric-a-bracbric-a-brac /ˈbrɪk ə ˌbræk/ noun [uncountable] British English DHsmall objects that are not worth very much money but are interesting or attractive
Examples from the Corpus
bric-a-brac• Clothes and bric-a-brac have been pouring into the hospice's charity shops in response to an appeal for more goods.• There will be cakes, bric-a-brac, toys and books.• Any good clean jumble or bric-a-brac will be appreciated.• Please support us by providing bric-a-brac, clothes, unwanted but saleable articles, etc.• Soon villages by railway lines became centres of new craft industries, in wood-carving and other allegedly traditional bric-a-brac.• In the first stable, off the bay, was an astonishing display of unrelated bric-a-brac.• The shelves in the living room were lined with bric-a-brac and religious figurines.Origin bric-a-brac (1800-1900) French bric-à-brac