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burred

American  
[burd] / bɜrd /

adjective

  1. prickly or rough in texture.

  2. having a bur or burs.


Etymology

Origin of burred

First recorded in 1905–10; bur 1 + -ed 2

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Her voice is low and gently burred, her affect is a funky mix of playfulness and precision.

From New York Times • Feb. 14, 2020

The patter, delivered in Mr. Silven’s smooth, slightly burred voice, is a little pat, as when he intones, “By coincidence, by fate, by destiny, a group of you have come together to predict the improbable.”

From New York Times • Nov. 24, 2017

Camera shutters burred; the guizers yelled; and the longship, traveling in the opposite direction, scythed through the fire like a ghostly spectre.

From Slate • Oct. 30, 2015

At battle heat, Scotsman Murray's burred goddams can be softly terrible, Lithuanian-born Sidney Hillman's dat-for-that accent becomes a cracking sputter.

From Time Magazine Archive

While Patsy’s tongue burred out its Irish brogue she pushed at the tall figure in front of her—pushed with all her might.

From Seven Miles to Arden by Sawyer, Ruth