The Latin equivalent of the English noun 'burrow' is cuniculus. It's a masculine gender noun. Its literal meaning is 'a rabbit, cony'. But it loosely may be translated as 'an underground passage, a mine'.
Vac is Latin
Ego IS a Latin word. It is the Latin for I.
solus is the latin word for alone ( it is a latin root and can have endings added to it )
"Folium" means "leaf" in Latin.
from the latin word for circle
The Latin name that was called Yorkshire Terrier is known as rat dog. People in the 1600's called the Yorkie a rat because of how it liked to burrow into the ground and dig.
a burrow is a synonym
The antonym for the noun burrow (animal den or shelter) is not a burrow, no burrow. The antonym for verb burrow (to drill or dig a hole) is to fill or to fill in. The antonym for the verb burrow (to hide or to cover) is expose, reveal, uncover. The antonym for the verb burrow (to cuddle or to hold) is push away.
Justin Burrow's birth name is Justin Thompson Burrow.
we entered in the rabbit's Burrow. The burrow was very big.
a tree or a burrow
Burrow is a noun and a verb.
if you have bedding or shavings in the cage they will burrow sometimes
yes they will burrow in most anything
Daisies do not have runners that burrow underground.
The rabbit will dig a burrow tommorow.
Thomas Burrow died in 1986.