Burrow vs Dan - What's the difference?
burrow | dan |
A tunnel or hole, often as dug by a small creature.
* 1922 , (Margery Williams), (The Velveteen Rabbit)
(mining) A heap or heaps of rubbish or refuse.
A mound.
An incorporated town.
(Webster 1913)
(obsolete)
* Spenser
* Thomson
As a noun burrow
is a tunnel or hole, often as dug by a small creature.As a verb burrow
is to dig a tunnel or hole.As an adjective dan is
stretched.burrow
English
Noun
(en noun)- But very soon he grew to like it, for the Boy used to talk to him, and made nice tunnels' for him under the bedclothes that he said were like the ' burrows the real rabbits lived in.
dan
English
(dan rank)Etymology 1
From (etyl)Etymology 2
Uncertain.Etymology 3
(etyl)Noun
- Old Dan Geoffry, in gently spright / The pure wellhead of poetry did dwell.
- What time Dan Abraham left the Chaldee land.