burgh

Etymology
From, , , , from , from , from.

Cognate with 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬. .

Noun

 * 1)  a small mound, often used in reference to tumuli (mostly restricted to place names).
 * 2)  a borough or chartered town (now only used as an official subdivision in Scotland).
 * 3) * 1815,, The Excursion, Book Eighth, The Parsonage, lines 95-104,
 * With fruitless pains / Might one like me 'now' visit many a tract / Which, in his youth, he trod, and trod again, / A lone pedestrian with a scanty freight, / Wished-for, or welcome, wheresoe'er he came— / Among the tenantry of thorpe and vill; / Or straggling burgh, of ancient charter proud, / And dignified by battlements and towers / Of some stern castle, mouldering on the brow / Of a green hill or bank of rugged stream.

Translations

 * Manx: cochorp
 * Scottish Gaelic: borgh, baile