Free TranslationFree Translation
Synonyms, antonyms, pronunciation

  Home
English Dictionary      examples: 'day', 'get rid of', 'New York Bay'




Burns   /bərnz/   Listen
Burns

noun
1.
United States comedian and film actor (1896-1996).  Synonyms: George Burns, Nathan Birnbaum.
2.
Celebrated Scottish poet (1759-1796).  Synonym: Robert Burns.



Burn

verb
(past & past part. burned or burnt; pres. part. burning)
1.
Destroy by fire.  Synonyms: burn down, fire.
2.
Shine intensely, as if with heat.  Synonym: glow.  "The candles were burning"
3.
Undergo combustion.  Synonym: combust.
4.
Cause a sharp or stinging pain or discomfort.  Synonyms: bite, sting.
5.
Cause to burn or combust.  Synonym: combust.  "We combust coal and other fossil fuels"
6.
Feel strong emotion, especially anger or passion.  "He was burning to try out his new skies"
7.
Cause to undergo combustion.  Synonym: incinerate.  "The car burns only Diesel oil"
8.
Burn at the stake.
9.
Spend (significant amounts of money).
10.
Feel hot or painful.
11.
Burn, sear, or freeze (tissue) using a hot iron or electric current or a caustic agent.  Synonyms: cauterise, cauterize.
12.
Get a sunburn by overexposure to the sun.  Synonym: sunburn.
13.
Create by duplicating data.  Synonym: cut.  "Burn a CD"
14.
Use up (energy).  Synonyms: burn off, burn up.
15.
Burn with heat, fire, or radiation.
noun
1.
Pain that feels hot as if it were on fire.  Synonym: burning.
2.
A browning of the skin resulting from exposure to the rays of the sun.  Synonyms: sunburn, suntan, tan.
3.
An injury caused by exposure to heat or chemicals or radiation.
4.
A place or area that has been burned (especially on a person's body).  Synonym: burn mark.
5.
Damage inflicted by fire.



Related searches:



WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








Advanced search
     Find words:
Starting with
Ending with
Containing
Matching a pattern  

Synonyms
Antonyms
Quotes
Words linked to  

only single words



Share |





"Burns" Quotes from Famous Books



... Hope burns and glimmers over misery like naphtha over water. Its hovering flame ever floats over human sorrow. Ursus had come to this conclusion, "It is probable that it was Gwynplaine whom they buried, but it is not certain. Who knows? Perhaps Gwynplaine is ...
— The Man Who Laughs • Victor Hugo

... happy here. This strange, odd life fascinates me. As for churches, "the groves were God's first temples," "and for the strength of the hills, the Swiss mountains bless him"; and as to books, I read Shakespeare, David, Spenser, Paul, Coleridge, Burns, and Shelley, which are never old. In good sooth, I fancy that nature intended me for an Arab or some other nomadic barbarian, and by mistake my soul got packed up in a Christianized set of bones and muscles. How I shall ever be able to content myself to ...
— The Shirley Letters from California Mines in 1851-52 • Louise Amelia Knapp Smith Clappe

... arrow he ran across country, over roadway and wall, plowed fields and rippling burns. He scrambled under hedges and dashed across farmsteads and cottage gardens. As he neared the city the hour bells aided him, for the Skye terrier is keen of hearing. It was growing dark when he climbed up the last bank and gained Lauriston Place. There he picked up the odors of ...
— Greyfriars Bobby • Eleanor Atkinson

... sympathetic mediaevalism, might have been written by a Tractarian. The 'Life of Sterling' is the favourite book of many who would sooner pick oakum than read 'Frederick the Great' all through; whilst the mere student of belles lettres may attach importance to the essays on Johnson, Burns, and Scott, on Voltaire and Diderot, on Goethe and Novalis, and yet remain blankly indifferent to 'Sartor Resartus' and 'The ...
— Obiter Dicta • Augustine Birrell

... hold on this time—when he had the best chance of popularity—than Crabbe, one of his own group, while he was destitute of the extraordinary appeals—which might be altogether unrecognised for a time but when felt are unmistakable—of the other two, Burns and Blake, of the poets of the seventeen-eighties. His religiosity was a doubtful "asset" as people say nowadays: and even his pathetic personal history had its awkward side. But as to his letters there has hardly at any time, since ...
— A Letter Book - Selected with an Introduction on the History and Art of Letter-Writing • George Saintsbury


More quotes...



Copyright © 2025 e-Free Translation.com