Burn (landform)
In local usage, a burn is a kind of watercourse. The term applies to a large stream or a small river. The word is used in Scotland and England (especially North East England) and in parts of Ulster, Kansas, Australia and New Zealand.
Etymology
The cognate of burn in standard English is "bourn", "bourne", "borne", "born", which is retained in placenames like Bournemouth, King's Somborne, Holborn, Melbourne. A cognate in German is Born[1] (contemp. Brunnen), meaning "well", "spring" or "source", which is retained in placenames like Paderborn in Germany. Both the English and German words derive from the same Proto-Germanic root.[2]
Scots Gaelic has the word bùrn, also cognate, but which means "fresh water"; the actual Gaelic for a "burn" is allt (sometimes anglicised as "ault" or "auld" in placenames.)
Examples
- Blackburn
- Broxburn
- Bucks Burn
- Burnside
- Braid Burn
- Dighty Burn
- Burn Dale, East Donegal
- Burnfoot, Inishowen
- Burn of Elsick
- Burn of Pheppie
- Burn of Muchalls
- Bannockburn
- Crawfordsburn
- Cronaniv Burn, Gaoth Dobhair
- Gisburn
- Hebburn
- Jordan Burn
- Kilburn (disambiguation)
- Lyburn
- Ouseburn
- Routeburn Track
- Seaburn
- Seaton Burn
- Shirburn
- Tedburn
- Tyburn
- Westburn
- Whitburn
- Whitlawburn
- Winkburn
- Winterburn
- Wooburn
References
- ^ "DWDS | Suchergebnisse für Born" (in German). Dwds.de. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
- ^ "Online Etymology Dictionary". Etymonline.com. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
External links
- CS1 German-language sources (de)
- Articles with short description
- Short description is different from Wikidata
- Use New Zealand English from April 2024
- All Wikipedia articles written in New Zealand English
- Use dmy dates from April 2022
- Water streams
- Landforms
- Northumbrian folklore
- Rural Scotland
- Scots language
- Scottish English
- Scottish toponyms
- Rivers of Scotland
- Rivers of Northumberland
- Rivers of New Zealand
- Rivers of Ireland