Burg vs Birth - What's the difference?
burg | birth |
(North America) A city or town.
* {{quote-book
, year=1921
, year_published=2012
, edition=HTML
, editor=
, author=Edgar Rice Burroughs
, title=The Efficiency Expert
, chapter=
* {{quote-magazine
, date=
, year=2009
, month=June
, first=David
, last=Thriault
, author=
, coauthors=
, title=This Way In: The Sound and the Fury
, volume=151
, issue=6
, page=6
, magazine=Esquire
, publisher=
, issn=
, url=
, passage=Imagine my surprise when I learned that he was not only a Canadian but lived in Ottawa, that icy burg I had left so many kilometers -- sorry, miles -- behind me.
}}
* {{quote-magazine
, date=
, year=2010
, month=Feb
, first=Paige
, last=Orloff
, author=
, coauthors=
, title=Big Style on a (Little) Budget
, volume=33
, issue=2
, page=84
, magazine=Country Living
, publisher=
, issn=
, url=
, passage=It's been said that Wilder modeled that fictional setting on Peterborough, a quaint burg tucked away in New Hampshire's verdant southwestern hills.
}}
(historical) A fortified town in medieval Europe.
(uncountable) The process of childbearing; the beginning of life.
(countable) An instance of childbirth.
(countable) A beginning or start; a point of origin.
(uncountable) The circumstances of one's background, ancestry, or upbringing.
* Prescott
That which is born.
* Ben Jonson
* Addison
A familial relationship established by childbirth.
(dated, or, regional) To bear or give birth to (a child).
* 1939 ,
(figuratively) To produce, give rise to.
* 2006 , R. Bruce Hull, Infinite Nature , University of Chicago Press, ISBN 9780226359441,
As nouns the difference between burg and birth
is that burg is (north america) a city or town while birth is (uncountable) the process of childbearing; the beginning of life.As an adjective birth is
a familial relationship established by childbirth.As a verb birth is
(dated|or|regional) to bear or give birth to (a child).burg
English
Noun
(en noun)citation, genre= , publisher=The Gutenberg Project , isbn= , page= , passage=Tell mother that I will write her in a day or two, probably from Chicago, as I have always had an idea that that was one burg where I could make good. }}
Anagrams
* ----birth
English
Noun
- Intersex babies account for roughly one per cent of all births .
- the birth of an empire
- He was of noble birth , but fortune had not favored him.
- elected without reference to birth , but solely for qualifications
- Poets are far rarer births than kings.
- Others hatch their eggs and tend the birth till it is able to shift for itself.
Antonyms
* (beginning of life) deathReferences
Adjective
(-)- Her birth father left when she was a baby; she was raised by her mother and stepfather.
Synonyms
* biological, blood, consanguineousVerb
(en verb)- "I don't know nothin' 'bout birthin' babies!"
page 156:
- Biological evolution created a human mind that enabled cultural evolution, which now outpaces and outclasses the force that birthed it.