To burke means to suppress something quietly or indirectly, or to bypass and avoid.
To burke means to suppress something quietly or indirectly, or to bypass and avoid.
| Front | burke \BERK\ |
|---|---|
| Back | verb 1. To suppress quietly or indirectly. 2. Bypass, avoid. [When an elderly pensioner died at the Edinburgh boarding house of William Hare in 1827, the proprietor and his friend William Burke decided to sell the body to a local anatomy school. The sale was so lucrative that they decided to make sure they could repeat it. They began luring nameless wanderers (who were not likely to be missed) into the house, getting them drunk, then smothering or strangling them and selling the bodies. The two disposed of at least 15 victims before murdering a local woman whose disappearance led to their arrest. At Burke's execution (by hanging), irate crowds shouted "Burke him!" As a result of the case, the word "burke" became a byword first for death by suffocation or strangulation and eventually for any cover-up.] "When Logeto came in, the killer burked him. Logeto never made a sound." William Diehl; Hooligans; Villard Books; 1984. "There is no point in burking the truth: Gandhi and India are fast going to be at odds with each other." Does Mahatma Gandhi Matter?; Business Line (Chennai, India); Oct 1, 2007. |
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