borrow
Appearance
See also:Borrow
English
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]- (Received Pronunciation)enPR:bŏrʹō;IPA(key):/ˈbɒɹ.əʊ/
- (General American)enPR:bärʹō;IPA(key):/ˈbɑɹ.oʊ/
- (Canada)enPR:bôrʹō;IPA(key):/ˈbɔɹ.oʊ/
Audio(US): (file) - Rhymes:-ɒɹəʊ
- Hyphenation:bor‧row
Etymology 1
[edit]FromMiddle Englishborwen,borȝien,Old Englishborgian(“to borrow, lend, pledge surety for”),fromProto-West Germanic*borgōn,fromProto-Germanic*burgōną(“to pledge, take care of”),fromProto-Indo-European*bʰergʰ-(“to take care”).
Cognate withDutchborgen(“to borrow, trust”),Germanborgen(“to borrow, lend”),Danishborge(“to vouch”).Related toOld Englishbeorgan(“to save, preserve”).More atbury.
Alternative forms
[edit]- boro(Jamaican English)
Verb
[edit]borrow(third-person singular simple presentborrows,present participleborrowing,simple past and past participleborrowed)
- Toreceive(something) from somebody temporarily, expecting toreturnit.
- 2013June 1, “End of the peer show”,inThe Economist,volume407,number8838,page71:
- Finance is seldom romantic. But the idea of peer-to-peer lending comes close. This is an industry that brings together individual savers and lenders on online platforms. Those that want toborroware matched with those that want to lend.
- To receive money from a bank or other lender under the agreement that the lender will be paid back over time.
- To adopt (an idea) as one's own.
- toborrowthe style, manner, or opinions of another
- 1649,J[ohn] Milton,ΕΙΚΟΝΟΚΛΆΣΤΗΣ[Eikonoklástēs][…],London:[…]Matthew Simmons,[…],→OCLC:
- It is not hard for any man, who hath a Bible in his hands, toborrowgood words and holy sayings in abundance; but to make them his own is a work of grace only from above.
- 1881,William Minto,Margaret Bryant, “John Dryden”, inEncyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition[1]:
- Dryden’s form is of courseborrowedfrom the ancients
- (linguistics)To adopt a word from another language.
- (arithmetic)In asubtraction,to deduct (one) from a digit of theminuendand add ten to the following digit, in order that the subtraction of a larger digit in thesubtrahendfrom the digit in the minuend to which ten is added gives a positive result.
- (Upper Midwestern United States,West Midlands,Malaysia,proscribed)Tolend.
- 1951,The Grenadiers, edited by James P. Leary,Wisconsin Folklore,University of Wisconsin Press, published1998,→ISBN,Milwaukee Talk, page56:
- “Rosie,borrowme your look looker, I bet my lips are all. Everytime[sic]I eat or drink, so quick I gotta fix ’em, yet.”
- 1996,Beverley Harper,Storms Over Africa:
- Samson, with all the cunning of a rhetorical master, cornered him. 'Then can my young sonborrowme his old rifle?'
- 1999,Sarah Curtis,Children who Break the Law, Or, Everybody Does it,page21:
- In a bank theyborrowyou the money at very low rates and if you don't take it back, you suffer the consequences in a jail sentence and there's a certain procedure it goes through.
- 1999,Marie Hall Ets,Rosa: The Life of an Italian Immigrant,page233:
- The next week she came back and she said to me and my husband, "If Iborrowyou the money to buy a little house do you think you can pay me back like rent? "
- 2005,Gladys Blyth,Summer at the Cannery,Trafford Publishing,→ISBN,page83:
- “Ryan,borrowme your lunch pail so we can fill it with blueberries. Susie can make us a pie.”
- 2006,Andrés Rueda,The Clawback,Andres Rueda,→ISBN,Chapter 13, page131:
- Georgi reached for his empty pockets. “Can youborrowme your telephone?”
- 2007,Silvia Cecchini,Bach Flowers Fairytales,Lulu,→ISBN,page 7:
- “Gaia, could youborrowme your pencils,[sic]today, if you do not use them?”
- (ditransitive)To temporarily obtain (something) for (someone).
- 1623,William Shakespeare,As You Like It:
- You mustborrowme Garagantua's mouth first: 'tis a word too great for any mouth of this age's size: To say, ay, and no, to these particulars, is more than to answer in a catechism.
- 1681,Mr. Normanton, quotee, “Trial of Sir Miles Stapleton”, inState Trials, 33 Charles II,page516:
- Yes, my lord, he told me this in my own house; and I told him he might go to esquire Tindal, and I lent him eighteen pence, andborrowedhim a horse in the town.
- 1866April 20, Charles W. G. Howard, “Minutes of Evidence Taken Before the Select Committee”, inparliamentary debates(House of Commons), page84:
- I went out andborrowedhim a night cap; put him my night shirt on, and wrapped him in a blanket.
- 1999August 1, “Ronnie Dawson, Singer, Comments on his Career and Music”, inNPR_Weekend:
- My folks couldn't afford a guitar, so my dadborrowedme a mandolin one time, and I was just learning to play it pretty good and the guy that he borrowed it from wanted it back.
- 2006,Laurie Graham,Gone with the Windsors,page116:
- George Lightfoot seemed to have forgotten he was meant to be a Lost Sheep, and turned up as the Tin Man, but I forgave him, because he'd managed toborrowme a divine brass crazier from one of his bishop friends.
- To feign or counterfeit.
- 1590,Edmund Spenser,“Book III, Canto XII”, inThe Faerie Queene.[…],London:[…][John Wolfe] forWilliam Ponsonbie,→OCLC,stanza 14:
- borrowedhair
- c.1596(date written), William Shakespeare, “The Life and Death of King Iohn”,inMr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies[…](First Folio), London:[…]Isaac Iaggard,andEd[ward]Blount,published1623,→OCLC,[Act I, scene i]:
- theborrowedmajesty of England
- (obsolete except in ballads)To secure the release of (someone) from prison.
- Traditional,"Young Beichan" (Child ballad 53)
- But if ony maiden wouldborrowme,
- I would wed her wi' a ring,
- And a' my land and a' my houses,
- They should a' be at her command.
- Traditional,"Young Beichan" (Child ballad 53)
- (informal)Toreceive(something, usually of trifling value) from somebody, with little possibility of returning it.
- Can Iborrowa sheet of paper?
- (informal)To interrupt the current activity of (a person) and lead them away in order to speak with them, get their help, etc.
- John, can Iborrowyou for a second? I need your help with the copier.
- (golf)Toadjustone'saimin order tocompensatefor theslopeof thegreen.
Conjugation
[edit]Conjugation ofborrow
infinitive | (to)borrow | ||
---|---|---|---|
present tense | past tense | ||
1st-personsingular | borrow | borrowed | |
2nd-personsingular | borrow,borrowest† | borrowed,borrowedst† | |
3rd-personsingular | borrows,borroweth† | borrowed | |
plural | borrow | ||
subjunctive | borrow | borrowed | |
imperative | borrow | — | |
participles | borrowing | borrowed |
Synonyms
[edit]Antonyms
[edit]- (antonym(s) of“receive temporarily”):give back(exchanging the transfer of ownership),lend(exchanging the owners),return(exchanging the transfer of ownership)
- (antonym(s) of“in arithmetic”):carry(the equivalent reverse procedure in the inverse operation of addition)
Derived terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]receive temporarily
|
adopt (an idea) as one's own
|
copy a word from another language
|
in a subtraction
|
Noun
[edit]borrow(countableanduncountable,pluralborrows)
- (golf,countable,uncountable)Deviation of the path of a rolling ball from a straight line; slope; slant.
- This putt has a big left-to rightborrowon it.
- 1905,Harry Vardon,The Complete Golfer:
- The amount ofborrow,as we term it, that must be taken from the side of any particular slope is entirely a matter of mathematical calculation,[…]
- 2020,George C. Thomas,Golf Architecture in America: Its Strategy and Construction:
- […]slippery contours, so that in making a side hill putt more than the usual amount ofborrowhad to be considered.
- (construction,civil engineering)Aborrow pit.
- 1979,The Canadian Mining and Metallurgical Bulletin:
- As previously indicated, slurry used for construction of the slurry cutoff trench at Beaver Creek Dam was produced with natural clays and clay tills from localborrows.
- (programming)In theRustprogramming language, the situation where theownershipof avalueis temporarily transferred to another region of code.
- 2018,Daniel Arbuckle,Rust Quick Start Guide:
- If we currently have anyborrowsof a value, we can't mutably borrow it into
self
,nor can we move it (because that would invalidate the existingborrows).
Translations
[edit]Etymology 2
[edit]FromMiddle Englishborwe,borgh,fromOld Englishborh,borg,fromProto-West Germanic*borgōn,fromProto-Germanic*burgōną(“to borrow, lend”)(related to Etymology 1, above).
Noun
[edit]borrow(pluralborrows)
- (archaic)Aransom;apledgeorguarantee.
- (archaic)Asurety;someone standingbail.
- 1819,Walter Scott,Ivanhoe:
- ”where am I to find such a sum? If I sell the very pyx and candlesticks on the altar at Jorvaulx, I shall scarce raise the half; and it will be necessary for that purpose that I go to Jorvaulx myself; ye may retain asborrowsmy two priests.”
Categories:
- English 2-syllable words
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- Rhymes:English/ɒɹəʊ
- Rhymes:English/ɒɹəʊ/2 syllables
- English terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- English terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *bʰergʰ-
- English terms derived from Middle English
- English terms derived from Old English
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