Din vs. Dun

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Dinnoun

A loud noise; a cacophony or loud commotion.

Dinverb

(intransitive) To make a din, to resound.

Dinverb

(intransitive) (of a place) To be filled with sound, to resound.

Dinverb

(transitive) To assail (a person, the ears) with loud noise.

Dinverb

(transitive) To repeat continuously, as though to the point of deafening or exhausting somebody.

Dinnoun

Loud, confused, harsh noise; a loud, continuous, rattling or clanging sound; clamor; roar.

Dinverb

To strike with confused or clanging sound; to stun with loud and continued noise; to harass with clamor; as, to din the ears with cries.

Dinverb

To utter with a din; to repeat noisily; to ding.

Dinverb

To sound with a din; a ding.

Dinnoun

a loud harsh or strident noise

Dinnoun

the act of making a noisy disturbance

Dinverb

make a resonant sound, like artillery;

Dinverb

instill (into a person) by constant repetition;

Dunnoun

A brownish grey colour.

Dunnoun

(countable) A collector of debts.

Dunnoun

An urgent request or demand of payment.

Dunnoun

(countable) A newly hatched, immature mayfly; a mayfly subimago.

Dunnoun

A fly made to resemble the mayfly subimago.

Dunnoun

An ancient or medieval fortification; especially a hill-fort in Scotland or Ireland.

Dunnoun

(archeology) A structure in the Orkney or Shetland islands or in Scotland consisting of a roundhouse surrounded by a circular wall; a broch.

Dunnoun

A mound or small hill.

Dunadjective

Of a brownish grey colour.

Dunverb

(transitive) To ask or beset a debtor for payment.

Dunverb

(transitive) To harass by continually repeating e.g. a request.

Dunverb

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Dunverb

eye dialect of|don't|nodot=1|lang=en}}: not.

Dunverb

To cure, as codfish, by laying them, after salting, in a pile in a dark place, covered with saltgrass or a similar substance.

Duninterjection

(humorous) Imitating suspenseful music.

Dunnoun

A mound or small hill.

Dunnoun

One who duns; a dunner.

Dunnoun

An urgent request or demand of payment; as, he sent his debtor a dun.

Dunverb

To cure, as codfish, in a particular manner, by laying them, after salting, in a pile in a dark place, covered with salt grass or some like substance.

Dunverb

To ask or beset (e.g., a debtor), for payment; to urge importunately.

Dunadjective

Of a dark color; of a color partaking of a brown and black; of a dull brown color; swarthy.

Dunnoun

horse of a dull brownish gray color

Dunnoun

a color varying around light grayish brown;

Dunverb

treat cruelly;

Dunverb

persistently ask for overdue payment;

Dunverb

cure by salting;

Dunverb

make a dun color

Dunadjective

of a dull grayish brown to brownish gray color;

Dunadjective

of a dull greyish-brown colour

Dunadjective

dark or dusky

Dunnoun

a dull greyish-brown colour.

Dunnoun

a horse with a sandy or sandy-grey coat, black mane, tail, and lower legs, and a dark dorsal stripe.

Dunnoun

a subadult mayfly, which has drab coloration and opaque wings.

Dunnoun

an artificial fishing fly made to resemble a dun.

Dunnoun

a debt collector or an insistent creditor.

Dunnoun

a demand for payment.

Dunnoun

a stone-built fortified settlement in Scotland or Ireland, of a kind built from the late Iron Age to the early Middle Ages. The word is a frequent place-name element in Scotland and Ireland.

Dunverb

make persistent demands on (someone), especially for payment of a debt

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