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| bor·der [ báwrdər ] |
noun (plural bor·ders) |
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| Definition: |
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1. line dividing two areas: the line that officially separates two countries or regions, or the land on each side of it
 across the border
 border country
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2. land at edge: the edge of an area of land, or the ground near the edge
 a shy animal that rarely comes nearer than the border of the field
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3. strip around edge: a decorative band that runs along the edge of something such as a printed page or a length of fabric
 a handkerchief with a patterned border
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4. gardening flowerbed: a flowerbed along a wall or at the edge of a lawn or path
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transitive and intransitive verb (past and past participle bor·dered, present participle bor·der·ing, 3rd person present singular bor·ders) |
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| Definition: |
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1. form frontier with place: to form the frontier with another country or the boundary between two regions
 Italy borders Austria in the Alps.
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2. run along edge of something: to form a line along the edge of something
 a field bordered by willow trees
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| [14th century. < Old French bordeüre< Germanic] |