Crossword clues for burg
burg
- Whistle stop, perhaps
- City, informally
- Quiet town
- Town, so to speak
- Tank town
- Ham follower
- End of many town names
- Colloquial term for a town
- City suffix, sometimes
- Vicks place ending?
- Slangy town
- Nondescript town
- Harris or Vicks ending
- Ending for Harris or Johannes
- City name ending, sometimes
- "Harris" or "Vicks" ending
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Burg \Burg\, n. [AS. burh, burg, cf. LL. burgus. See 1st Borough.]
A fortified town. [Obs.]
A borough. [Eng.] See 1st Borough.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Wiktionary
n. (context North America English) A city or town.
WordNet
n. colloquial American term for a town; "I've lived in this burg all my life"
Wikipedia
Bürg or Burg is a prominent lunar impact crater in the northeast part of the Moon. It lies within the lava-flooded, ruined crater formation designated Lacus Mortis. To the south and southeast is the crater pair Plana and Mason. To the west, beyond the rim of Lacus Mortis, is the prominent crater Eudoxus.
Burg or Bürg may refer to:
- redirect Burg, Aargau
Burg is a municipality in the district of Spree-Neiße, in Brandenburg, Germany.
Burg (Spreewald) is an Amt ("municipal federation") in the district of Spree-Neiße, in Brandenburg, Germany. Its seat is in Burg (Spreewald).
The Amt Burg (Spreewald) consists of the following municipalities:
- Briesen
- Burg
- Dissen-Striesow
- Guhrow
- Schmogrow-Fehrow
- Werben
Burg or Bürg is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Usage examples of "burg".
Come down and speak with me in the batable land before the burg, and I swear to you peace and grith while we parley, and thereto pledge I mine honour as a man of war.
It seemed to him that the power of flight was upon him, and that he flew to that mountain and hung in air beholding it near at hand, and a circle as the appearance of fire round about it, and on the summit of the mountain the likeness of a burg or citadel of brass that was green with eld and surface-battered by the frosts and winds of ages.
Who then hath won the Burg of the Anses, and clomb the rampart of God-home?
I escaped thence, and am minded for the Burg, if perchance I may be deemed there a man good enough to ride in their host, whereby I might avenge me somewhat on them that have undone me: some of whom meseemeth must have put in thy mouth that word against the Burg.
I spake of nigher than I deemed when we came into the Burg this morning.
Within a while they all slacked somewhat, and presently did but walk, though swiftly, through the paths of the thicket, which Ralph deemed full surely was part of that side of the Wood Perilous that lay south of the Burg of the Four Friths.
So they of the Dry Tree advised them of these tidings, and deemed that it would ease the sorrow of their hearts for their Lady if they could deal with these sons of whores and make a mark upon the Burg: so they lay hid while the daylight lasted, and by night and cloud fell upon these faineants of the Burg, and won them good cheap, as was like to be, though the Burg-dwellers were many the more.
Burg were upon us, and deemed that there was nought for it but to flee each as far and as fast as he might.
Burg to be safe: but as to elsewhither we may wend, thereof we may speak on the road as we have leisure.
To the burg I draw anigh And I see all battle-banners in the breeze of morning fly, But no Wolfings round their banner and no warrior of the Shield, No Geiring and no Hrossing in the burg or on the field.
Burg, and durst scarce raise a hand against the foemen, the carles were but slow to love, and the queans, for all their fairness, cold and but little kind.
Burg, partly of those women-thralls, partly of carles and queans come newly from the Wheat-wearers, partly of men of our Fellowship the more part of whom are wedded to queans of the Wheat-wearers, and partly of men, chapmen and craftsmen and others who have drifted into the town, having heard that there is no lack of wealth there, and many fair women unmated.
If the Burg was a food, it would be pasta-penne rigate, ziti, fettuccine, spaghetti, and elbow macaroni, swimming in marinara, cheese sauce, or mayo.
Now it was in the cool of the evening two days after the Battle on the Ridge, that the men, both freemen and thralls, had been disporting themselves in the plain ground without the Burg in casting the spear and putting the stone, and running races a-foot and ahorseback, and now close on sunset three young men, two of the Laxings and one of the Shieldings, and a grey old thrall of that same House, were shooting a match with the bow, driving their shafts at a rushen roundel hung on a pole which the old thrall had dight.
Al Kratzus is one of those neighborhood guys, like my Uncle Moosh, who remember 360 THE LAWS OF OUR FATHERS when this was still three little burgs, not, as the world now sees it, a single megalopolis.