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dunAn animal’s color; term refers to animals who are black in color or have a stripe over the shoulders of a dark color
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dunOld English dunn "dingy brown, dark-colored," perhaps from Celtic (compare Old Irish donn "dark;" Gaelic donn "brown, dark;" Welsh dwnn "brownish"), from PIE *d [..]
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dun"to insist on payment of debt," 1620s, perhaps related to dunnen "to sound, resound, make a din" (c. 1200, dialectal variant of din), or shortened from dunkirk (c. 1600) "priv [..]
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dun don't
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dunDial-Up Networking DUN is a Bluetooth profile (mode) that is designed to link an Internet-enabled device such as mobile phone to a device such as a laptop or PDA so it can access the Internet. DUN wil [..]
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dunflat area in hills
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dunv. To make a demand or repeated demands on for payment.
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dun an old Christian game in which a heavy log was carried by the players; the color of a mouse.
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dunTo dream that you receive a dun, warns you to look after your affairs and correct all tendency towards neglect of business and love.
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dunScottish single family hill fort. (MEDIEV-L. Medieval Terms)
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dunDone
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dunDUN (Dialup Networking). Microsoft’s term for the software in Windows 95 that attaches a PC (Personal Computer) to the Internet via a dial up SLIP (Serial Line Interface Protocol) or PPP (Point-to-Poi [..]
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dunMicrosoft Dial-Up Networking, a configuration containing settings to enable a Windows® 95+ computer to make an Internet connection with an ISP. dynamic IP address
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dun(n) horse of a dull brownish grey color(n) a color or pigment varying around a light grey-brown color(v) treat cruelly(v) persistently ask for overdue payment(v) cure by salting(v) make a dun color(ad [..]
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dunOne who importunes for payment of a bill (Anglo-Saxon, dunan, to din or clamour). The tradition is that it refers to Joe Dun, a famous bailiff of Lincoln in the reign of Henry VII. The British Apollo [..]
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dunA color of horse. Light to medium sand colored with dark skin. Usually has dark points (mane, tail and lower legs.)
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dunn. "Dun, a name for a horse," proper n.; s.v. don n. MED. KEY: dun@n#propn
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dunn#propn 1 dun 1
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dunA simple fortified settlement, usually defended by large drystone ramparts. They are only known in Scotland and Ireland.
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dunGaelic for fortified place. To archaeologists meaning a small drystone fort, usually dating to the Iron Age or later, and found mainly in the west of Scotland
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dun
(uncountable) A brownish grey colour.
non|dúnn||down.
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