Bourne

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Bourne may mean:

[edit] General

[edit] Place names

Bourne is a word from the Anglo-Saxon language of England. It means a stream, flowing from a spring, and is commonly used in southern England, (particularly Dorset) as a name for a small river, particularly in compound names such as Winterbourne. It is used as a place name or as a part of a place name, usually in chalk downland countryside. Alternative forms are bourn or borne. The apparent variant, borne which is found in Camborne, arises from the Cornish language and is in fact a false friend: it refers to a hill (Cornish: bronn, from Common Brythonic *brunda; compare Irish bruinn). Born/borne in German also means fount, or spring, and is related to the Indo-European root, *bhreu. That born/borne appears throughout Europe as a place name is also an important clue that this spelling is an etymological precursor to the Middle English bourne/burn.

As Bourne, it appears in:

As Bourn, it appears in:

  • Bourn, Cambridgeshire, a village in England
  • Lambourn, a village in Berkshire, England

As Borne, it appears in:

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