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  1. BORNE definition: 1. past participle of bear 2. carried or moved by a particular thing: 3. past participle of bear. Learn more.

  2. Borne is, just like born, the past participle of the verb bear, which can mean (among other things) "to contain" or "to give birth to." At first, borne and born were variant spellings of the same adjective. Used as in water-borne (or water-born ), it means "carried by."

  3. Both born and borne are forms of bear. Born is commonly used with the sense of bear meaning 'to give birth.' Borne is used in reference to carrying something (physically or figuratively), as a combining form with words like air, and, occasionally, in the 'give birth to' sense.

  4. verb. for all active uses of the verb, the past participle of bear 1. for all passive uses of the verb except sense 4 unless followed by by, the past participle of bear 1. be borne in on or be borne in upon. (of a fact) to be realized by (someone) it was borne in on us how close we had been to disaster. Discover More. Word History and Origins.

  5. -borne combines with nouns to form adjectives that describe the method or means by which something is carried or moved. ...water-borne diseases. ...a mosquito-borne infection.

  6. 1. to hold up or support: The columns bear the weight of the roof. 2. to give birth to: to bear a child. 3. to produce by natural growth: a tree that bears fruit. 4. to sustain or be capable of: This claim doesn't bear close examination. The view bears comparison with the loveliest sights.

  7. BORNE definition: past participle of bear. Learn more.

  8. See borne in the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Check pronunciation: borne. Definition of borne in Oxford Advanced American Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  9. The sadness she felt as his truck disappeared down the road was borne of fear. As far as he could tell, she had borne it all without breathing a word to anyone else. Both women took the knives, handling them with awkwardness borne of a lack of familiarity with handling deadly weapons.

  10. borne is the past participle in all senses that do not refer to physical birth: The wheat fields have borne abundantly this year. Judges have always borne a burden of responsibility. borne is also the form when the sense is "to bring forth (young)'' and the focus is on the mother rather than on the child.

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