Interred vs Bury - What's the difference?
interred | bury |
Having been interred.
(of a buried corpse) Located.
(inter)
* 1623 , William Shakespeare, King Henry V , Crown Publishers, Inc. (1975), page 509
To ritualistically inter in a grave or tomb.
To place in the ground.
(transitive, often, figurative) To hide or conceal as if by covering with earth or another substance.
* {{quote-magazine, date=2013-06-29, volume=407, issue=8842, page=28, magazine=(The Economist)
, title= (figuratively) To suppress and hide away in one's mind.
(figuratively) To put an end to; to abandon.
* Shakespeare
(figuratively) To score a goal.
* {{quote-news, year=2011, date=January 25, author=Paul Fletcher, work=BBC
, title= (slang) To kill or murder.
(lb) A .
*
*:Orion hit a rabbit once; but though sore wounded it got to the bury , and, struggling in, the arrow caught the side of the hole and was drawn out. Indeed, a nail filed sharp is not of much avail as an arrowhead; you must have it barbed, and that was a little beyond our skill.
A borough; a manor
* 1843 , , book 2, ch. 5, "Twelfth Century"
As verbs the difference between interred and bury
is that interred is past tense of inter while bury is to ritualistically inter in a grave or tomb.As an adjective interred
is having been interred.As a noun bury is
a burrow.As a proper noun Bury is
a metropolitan borough of Greater Manchester, England.interred
English
Alternative forms
* intered (rare)Adjective
(-)Synonyms
* (having been interred) belowground, buried, inhumed * (located) buriedAntonyms
* (having been interred) unburiedVerb
(head)- I Richard's body have interred new, and on it have bestow'd more contrite tears than from it issu'd forced drops of blood...
Anagrams
*bury
English
Etymology 1
(etyl) burien, berien, from (etyl) .Verb
High and wet, passage=Floods in northern India, mostly in the small state of Uttarakhand, have wrought disaster on an enormous scale.
- Give me a bowl of wine. / In this I bury all unkindness, Cassius.
Arsenal 3-0 Ipswich (agg. 3-1), passage=You could feel the relief after Bendtner collected Wilshere's raking pass before cutting inside Carlos Edwards and burying his shot beyond Fulop.}}
Derived terms
*Noun
(buries)References
Etymology 2
See (borough).Noun
(buries)- Indisputable, though very dim to modern vision, rests on its hill-slope that same Bury , Stow, or Town of St. Edmund; already a considerable place, not without traffic