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bourn a limit, a boundary: “Bourn, bound of land,” THE TEMPEST, ii. 1. 146 ; “No bourn 'twixt his and mine,” THE WINTER'S TALE, i. 2. 134 ; “a bourn, a pale, a shore,” TROILUS AND CRESSIDA, ii. 3. 243 ; “from whose bourn No traveller returns,” HAMLET, iii. 1. 79 ; “this chalky bourn” KING LEAR, iv. 6. 57 ; ( “this chalky boundary of England, towards France,” STEEVENS) “I'll set a bourn,” ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA, i. 1. 16 ; “From bourn to bourn,” PERICLES, iv. 4. 4.

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