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  1. Borne vs. born. Borne is the past tense and past participle of bear in all senses not related to birth. So it’s the appropriate word where bear means to carry —making it the correct spelling in the phrasal verb borne out (e.g., “his prediction was not borne out in reality”) and in phrasal adjectives such as food-borne , mosquito-borne ...

  2. (n) bourn A stream; a brook: same as burn. (n) bourn [The word occurs in various place-names in Great Britain, as Bournemouth (that is, mouth of the burn or rivulet), Westbourne, etc.] (n) bourn A bound; limit; destination; goal: as, “beyond the bourn of sunset,” bourn

  3. 4 days ago · verb. 1. for all active uses of the verb, the past participle of bear 1. 2. for all passive uses of the verb except sense 4 unless followed by by, the past participle of bear 1. 3. See be borne in on.

  4. Definition of bourn in the Definitions.net dictionary. Meaning of bourn. What does bourn mean? Information and translations of bourn in the most comprehensive dictionary definitions resource on the web.

  5. The meaning of BEAR OUT is confirm, substantiate. How to use bear out in a sentence.

  6. The meaning of BOURN is stream, brook. idyllic days that were spent rambling the length of the bourn that flowed through that peaceful vale

  7. The earliest known use of the noun bourn is in the Middle English period (1150—1500). OED's earliest evidence for bourn is from around 1390, in the writing of William Langland, poet. bourn is a variant or alteration of another lexical item.

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