Boma vs Bora - What's the difference?
boma | bora |
An enclosure usually made of thorn bushes, and latterly of steel fencing, for protection from marauders.
* 2004 , J H Patterson, The Man Eaters of Tsavo and Other East African Adventures , Kessinger Publishing, page 17,
* 1993 , Cordelia Dykes Owens, The Eye of the Elephant , Houghton Mifflin Books, ISBN 0395680905, page 91,
* 2003 , Rosie Woodroffe, Simon Thirgood, Alan and Rabinowitz, People and Wildlife, Conflict Or Co-existence? , Cambridge University Press, page 298,
A stockade made of bushes and thorns.
* 2003 , Harold Brookfield, Helen Parsons, and Muriel Brookfield, Agrodiversity , United Nations University Press, page 108,
A hide.
* 1922 , Mary Hastings Bradley, On the Gorilla trail'', quoted in Mary Zeiss Strange (editor), ''Heart Shots: Women write about hunting , Stackpole Books, page 182,
A hut.
* 2004 , Jacyee Aniagolu-Johnson, Mikela , iUniverse, page 3,
(East African) A military or police post or magistracy.
* (rfdate) “Muyumbwe boma needs police post” (news report),
A type of fertilizer rich in animal dung.
* (rfdate)
A method of composting.
* (rfdate)
A cold, often dry, northeasterly wind which blows, sometimes in violent gusts, down from mountains on the eastern shore of the Adriatic Sea. It also applies to cold, squally, downslope winds in other parts of the world.
* 2006 , Thomas Pynchon, Against the Day , Vintage 2007, p. 650:
As nouns the difference between boma and bora
is that boma is grandmother while bora is bora.boma
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl) .Noun
(en noun)- Orders had been given for the enterance to the boma' to be blocked up, and accordingly we listened in the expectation of hearing the lion force his way through the bushes with his prey. As a matter of fact the doorway had not been closed and while we were wondering what the lion could be doing inside the ' boma for so long, he was outside reconnoitering our position.
- Carrying the hot water kettle, Mark follows the footpath through the dark camp to the boma . Surrounded by tall grass the boma is a three-sided structure of sticks and reeds standing at the edge of Marula Puku.
- Recent replacement of rolled mesh with bomas made of portable, flexible reinforced mesh panels have nearly eliminated predation.
- the area has three main groups. The Wamasi and Waarushaare still settled on the boma' system where the clan settle in one cluster called a ' boma comprised of several houses enclosed in a fence leaving the centre open for keeping livestock.
- You try to arrange the scene so the moonlight will be on the bait with a clear background against which the lion will show up. You pile as much fresh brush as you can on your thicket or boma , as the hiding place is called, for the lion can see as well by day as by night.
- The exotic beauty of our Masaailand is a marvel to our creator, she thought as she stepped back into her boma, a typical Masaai hut built with grass, dry sticks and twigs and covered with cow dung for insulation.
- Gwembe district police officer-in-charge Adams Gondwe has appealed to Government to put up a police post in Muyumbwe boma to replace one that was washed away by floods last year.
- The cattle are usually corralled overnight which enables farmers to collect farmyard or boma manure.
- The boma method is used on farms where there are animals which are kept in enclosures where droppings are concentrated.
See also
* kraalEtymology 2
See (l)Anagrams
* ----bora
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl) .Alternative forms
* BoraSynonyms
* burbungQuotations
* 1873, William Ridley, Report on Australian Languages and Traditions,'' in ''The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, Vol. 2 *: Birribirai, a youth not yet admitted to a bora . * 1885, A. L. P. Cameron, Notes on some Tribes of New South Wales,'' in ''The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, Vol. 14 *: By far the most important among the ceremonies practised by the aborigines of New South Wales is the Bora , at which youths are initiated to manhood...Etymology 2
Perhaps from a dialectal form of (etyl) .Noun
(-)- When the bora blew down from the mountains, announcing the winter, would he ride it on out of town?