Done vs Dun - What's the difference?
done | dun |
(of food) Ready, fully cooked.
In a state of having completed or finished an activity.
Being exhausted or fully spent.
Without hope or prospect of completion or success.
Fashionable, socially acceptable, tasteful.
(African American Vernacular English, Southern American English, auxiliary verb, taking a past tense) Used in forming the perfective aspect.
(uncountable) A brownish grey colour.
Of a brownish grey colour.
* Pierpont
* Keble
(countable) A collector of debts.
* Arbuthnot
* 1933 , (George Orwell), Down and Out in Paris and London , Ch. 18:
* 1970 , (John Glassco), Memoirs of Montparnasse , New York 2007, p. 102:
An urgent request or demand of payment.
To ask or beset a debtor for payment.
* Jonathan Swift
* 1749 , (Henry Fielding), Tom Jones , Folio Society 1973, p. 577:
* 1940 , (Raymond Chandler), Farewell, My Lovely , Penguin 2010, p. 107:
To harass by continually repeating e.g. a request.
(informal) : (do)
To cure, as codfish, by laying them, after salting, in a pile in a dark place, covered with saltgrass or a similar substance.
(humorous)
* Carrie Tucker, I Love Geeks
As verbs the difference between done and dun
is that done is while dun is to close, shut.As a noun dun is
fortress.done
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- As soon as the potatoes are done we can sit down and eat.
- He pushed his empty plate away, sighed and pronounced "I am done ."
- They were done playing and were picking up the toys when he arrived.
- When the water is done we will only be able to go on for a few days.
- He is done , after three falls there is no chance he will be able to finish.
- I can't believe he just walked up and spoke to her like that, those kind of things just aren't done !
- What is the done thing these days? I can't keep up!
Derived terms
* be done for * be done with it * done deal * get done for * overdone * well doneVerb
(head)- I have ''done'' my work.
- I done did my best to raise y'all.
Statistics
*Anagrams
* * English irregular past participles ----dun
English
(wikipedia dun)Etymology 1
From (etyl) dun, dunne, from (etyl) . Alternative etymology derives the Old English word from Late Brythonic (compare Old Welsh dwnn 'dark (red)'), from (etyl) (compare Old Saxon dosan 'chestnut brown'). More at dusk.Noun
Adjective
(-)- Summer's dun cloud comes thundering up.
- Chill and dun / Falls on the moor the brief November day.
Derived terms
* dun-barSee also
* bawn * durmast oak *Etymology 2
; perhaps a variant of din.Noun
(en noun)- to be pulled by the sleeve by some rascally dun
- Melancholy duns came looking for him at all hours.
- ‘Frank's worried about duns ,’ she said as the butler went away.
- He sent his debtor a dun .
Verb
(dunn)- Hath she sent so soon to dun ?
- Of all he had received from Lady Bellaston, not above five guineas remained and that very morning he had been dunned by a tradesman for twice that sum.
- Rich bitches who had to be dunned for their milk bills would pay him right now.
Derived terms
* dun letterEtymology 3
Etymology 4
Etymology 5
See done.Verb
(head)- He dun''' it before and he '''dun it again.
- Now, ya dun it!
Etymology 6
See .Etymology 7
Verb
(dunn)Etymology 8
See dune.Etymology 9
Imitative.Interjection
(en interjection)- Has he allowed the power and the repercussions of the Death Note to influence his entire life? How would you deal with that power? (Dun, dun, DUN! Insert dramatic music here.)
