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Borne vs Bambara - What's the difference?

borne | bambara |

As an adjective borne

is carried, supported.

As a verb borne

is .

As a noun bambara is

(language).

borne

English

Adjective

(-)
  • carried, supported.
  • * 1901 -
  • In the last rays of the setting sun, you could pick out far away down the reach his beard borne high up on the white structure, foaming up stream to anchor for the night.
  • * 1881: ", Poems , page 44
  • When, bright with purple and with gold,
    Come priest and holy cardinal,
    And borne above the heads of all
    The gentle Shepherd of the Fold.
  • * c.2000 - , II
  • Irving is further required, as a matter of practice, to spell out what he contends are the specific defamatory meanings borne by those passages.

    Derived terms

    * airborne * waterborne

    Verb

    (head)
  • * 1907 , , The Dust of Conflict chapter 21 [http://openlibrary.org/works/OL4429277W]
  • *:“Can't you understand that love without confidence is a worthless thing—and that had you trusted me I would have borne any obloquy with you.”
  • Synonyms

    * endured

    bambara

    English

    Proper noun

    (wikipedia Bambara) (en proper noun)
  • A West-African people.
  • # A member of that people.
  • A language spoken mainly in Mali by as many as six million people. Fewer numbers of people speak or understand the language, or dialects of it, in Senegal Burkina Faso, , and Gambia.
  • See also