[bʊrˈnɐ]
OriginFrom Proto-Balto-Slavic *burˀnāˀ, often thought to be from Proto-Indo-European *bʰerH- (“to bore, pierce”), the “mouth” being perceived as a “hole, opening”. Cognate with Latvian pur̂ns (“snout”), Bulgarian бърна (bǎrna, “lip”); more distant cognates may include Armenian բերան (beran, “mouth”), Old Norse barki (“throat, windpipe”).
Formsburnà(canonical, feminine, stress-pattern-3) · bùrnos(plural) · burnà(nominative, singular) · bùrnos(nominative, plural) · burnõs(genitive, singular) · burnų̃(genitive, plural) · bùrnai(dative, singular) · burnóms(dative, plural) · bùrną(accusative, singular) · bùrnas(accusative, plural) · bùrna(instrumental, singular) · burnomi̇̀s(instrumental, plural) · burnojè(locative, singular) · burnosè(locative, plural) · bùrna(singular, vocative) · bùrnos(plural, vocative)