Earth:Burn (landform)

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Short description: Term of Scottish origin for a small river
Views of Usway Burn
Usway Burn is a tributary of River Coquet in Northumberland

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

External links