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Burden   /bˈərdən/   Listen
Burden

noun
1.
An onerous or difficult concern.  Synonyms: encumbrance, incumbrance, load, onus.  "That's a load off my mind"
2.
Weight to be borne or conveyed.  Synonyms: load, loading.
3.
The central meaning or theme of a speech or literary work.  Synonyms: core, effect, essence, gist.
4.
The central idea that is expanded in a document or discourse.
verb
(past & past part. burdened; pres. part. burdening)
1.
Weight down with a load.  Synonyms: burthen, weight, weight down.  Antonym: unburden.
2.
Impose a task upon, assign a responsibility to.  Synonyms: charge, saddle.



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"Burden" Quotes from Famous Books



... showed as a grey box, huddled against evergreens. There was no mystery about it. You saw it for miles. Its hill had none of the beetling romance of Devonshire, none of the subtle contours that prelude a cottage in Kent, but profferred its burden crudely, on a huge bare palm. "There's Cadover," visitors would say. "How small it still looks. We shall be late for lunch." And the view from the windows, though extensive, would not have been accepted by the Royal Academy. A valley, containing a stream, a road, a railway; over ...
— The Longest Journey • E. M. Forster

... sex; and scruples of female delicacy interfere for ever to unnerve and emasculate in their hands the sceptre however otherwise potent. Hence we see, in noble families, the merest boys put forward to represent the family dignity, as fitter supporters of that burden than their mature mothers. And of Caesar's mother, though little is recorded, and that little incidentally, this much at least we learn—that, if she looked down upon him with maternal pride and delight, she looked up to him with female ambition as the re-edifier of ...
— "De Bello Gallico" and Other Commentaries • Caius Julius Caesar

... and M. Mizon during their first voyage was 2,900 lb., and the wagons weighed 5,000 lb. Hence the expedition had to carry a supplementary weight of 31/2 tons; but at any given moment the material forming this burden became the means of transporting, in its turn, seven boats, representing a total weight ...
— Scientific American Supplement, No. 446, July 19, 1884 • Various

... us in the church have no power given them of Christ which is not for edifying, Eph. iv. 12. The counsel of the apostles and elders at Jerusalem (which is a lively pattern of a lawful synod to the world's end) professed they would lay no other burden upon the disciples except such things as the law of charity made necessary for shunning of scandal, Acts xv. 28; and so that which they decreed had force and strength to bind a charitate propter scandalum, saith Sanctius;(1197) but suo arbitratu they ...
— The Works of Mr. George Gillespie (Vol. 1 of 2) • George Gillespie

... had passed between them then, but later, through the medium of his host, he had sought her out, and called upon her. Within a week he had asked her to be his wife. And Nan Everard, impulsive, dazzled by the prospect of unbounded wealth, and feverishly eager to ease the family burden, had accepted him. ...
— The Odds - And Other Stories • Ethel M. Dell


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