buron

English

Etymology

Borrowed from French buron.

Noun

buron (plural burons)

  1. (often italicized) A traditional Auvergne shepherd's hut with a thatched roof, or a rustic mountain chalet in the same style.
    • 1996, Simone A. Abram, “Reactions to Tourism: A View from the Deep Green Heart of France”, in Jeremy Boissevain, editor, Coping with Tourists, →ISBN, page 194:
      According to Jaques, too, most of the tourists at the buron were French people with 'farming roots'

Anagrams

Albanian

Alternative forms

  • vrujon

Etymology

From Proto-Indo-European *bhrē̆u- (wellspring), ultimately from *bʰer-, *bʰrē- (to bear). Compare Old High German brunno (wellspring), burjan (to push up, raise), Old English byrian (to come up, occur).

Verb

buron (first-person singular past tense burova, participle buruar)

  1. (it) springs, gushs, flows

French

Pronunciation

  • (file)

Noun

buron m (plural burons)

  1. a traditional Auvergne shepherd's hut with a thatched roof

Further reading

Anagrams

Indonesian

Etymology

Equivalent to buru + -an, from Javanese ꦧꦸꦫꦺꦴꦤ꧀ (buron). Doublet of buruan.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /burɔn/
  • Hyphenation: bu‧ron
  • Rhymes: -rɔn, -ɔn

Noun

buron (first-person possessive buronku, second-person possessive buronmu, third-person possessive buronnya)

  1. fugitive

Alternative forms

Derived terms

  • buronan
  • memburon

Further reading

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