dun$23289$ - meaning and definition. What is dun$23289$
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What (who) is dun$23289$ - definition

FORT
Dun Aonghasa; Dun Aengus; Dun Angus; Dún Angus; Dún Oengus; Dun Oengus; Dún Aenghus; Dun Aenghus; Dún Aengus; Dún Aonghusa

dun         
  • [[Dunamase]], central Ireland (from Irish ''Dún Másc'', "Másc's fort")
  • Walls of [[Dún Aonghasa]], a dun on [[Inishmore]], Ireland
GENERIC TERM FOR AN ANCIENT OR MEDIEVAL FORT
Dún; Dūno-; Duno-
Something that is dun is a dull grey-brown colour.
...her dun mare.
COLOUR
dun         
  • [[Dunamase]], central Ireland (from Irish ''Dún Másc'', "Másc's fort")
  • Walls of [[Dún Aonghasa]], a dun on [[Inishmore]], Ireland
GENERIC TERM FOR AN ANCIENT OR MEDIEVAL FORT
Dún; Dūno-; Duno-
dun1
¦ adjective of a dull greyish-brown colour.
¦ noun
1. a dull greyish-brown colour.
2. a horse with a sandy coat, black mane, tail, and lower legs, and a dark dorsal stripe.
3. a subadult mayfly with drab, opaque wings, or a fishing fly imitating this.
Origin
OE dun, dunn, of Gmc origin; prob. related to dusk.
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dun2
¦ verb (duns, dunning, dunned) make persistent demands on (someone) for payment of a debt.
¦ noun archaic a debt collector or an insistent creditor.
Origin
C17 (asnoun): perh. from obs. Dunkirk privateer (with connotations of piratical demands), or from the name of a Joe Dun, a well-known bailiff.
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dun3
¦ noun Archaeology (often in place names) a stone-built fortified settlement in Scotland or Ireland, of a kind built from the late Iron Age to the early Middle Ages.
Origin
C18: from Ir. dun, Sc. Gaelic dun 'hill or hill fort'.
dun         
  • [[Dunamase]], central Ireland (from Irish ''Dún Másc'', "Másc's fort")
  • Walls of [[Dún Aonghasa]], a dun on [[Inishmore]], Ireland
GENERIC TERM FOR AN ANCIENT OR MEDIEVAL FORT
Dún; Dūno-; Duno-
v. (D; tr.) to dun for (to dun smb. for payment)

Wikipedia

Dún Aonghasa

Dún Aonghasa (Unofficial anglicised version Dun Aengus) is the best-known of several prehistoric hill forts on the Aran Islands of County Galway, Ireland. It lies on Inis Mór, at the edge of a 100-metre-high (330 ft) cliff.

A popular tourist attraction, Dún Aonghasa is an important archaeological site.