Nowadays, den is only used as an abbreviation for a pine. In old Dutch, it was being used as an article as well(nowadays "de" meaning the),
Yes, the noun 'den' is used as a collective noun for:a den of snakesa den of thievesa den of vipers
No, it is not. The sentence would read "Looking out from your den you could see a wolf enter den". The second usage of den/quane should have a "the" in front of it. "Looking out from your den you could see a wolf enter the den." "Looking out from your quane you could see a wolf enter the quane." These would be correct.
It is a reference to a biblical character by the name of Daniel (Book of Daniel) who found himself thrown into a lion's den as punishment for disobeying the reigning king, Nebuchadnezzar. Thus the phrase when a person finds him/herself in dire straits or in a very difficult position, they are said to be "in the lion's den"
The rabbit den is called a burrow. They dig burrows in the ground to make a den.
Den has different meanings. Used in names like Den Boschor Den Haag it mean "of the". Used in sentences like Den ouden heer, it mean "the". The word is now no longer in use. Den could also mean a fir tree or spruce
The translation of "den" into French is "antre". This word is feminine. Thus, "la antre" would mean "the den," and "une antre" would mean "a den."
a natal den means den that is
Ich akzeptiere den Waffenstillstand = I accept the truce.
I mean that give me a list of words that have the suffix den in it
Chicago or a Den, depends on which bears you mean?
You probably mean the Berlin street 'Unter den Linden'.
In a den selected by their mothers, usually during her winter den up.
i den see it
i den see it
you look up and den where u see cheats clickon it den click cheat list den click on game shark to add cheats ande den press ok and den press the other ok
it means "of the very best quality" e.g "cara den scoth" would mean a friend of the highest quality