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den
den D0128500 (dĕn)n.1. The shelter or retreat of a wild animal; a lair.2. A cave or hollow used as a refuge or hiding place.3. A hidden or squalid dwelling place: a den of thieves.4. A secluded room for study or relaxation.5. A unit of about eight to ten Cub Scouts.intr.v. denned, den·ning, dens To inhabit or hide in a den. [Middle English, from Old English denn.]den (dɛn) n1. (Zoology) the habitat or retreat of a lion or similar wild animal; lair2. a small or secluded room in a home, often used for carrying on a hobby3. a squalid or wretched room or retreat4. a site or haunt: a den of vice. 5. (Physical Geography) Scot a small wooded valley; dingle6. (Team Sports, other than specified) dialect Scot and Northern English a place of sanctuary in certain catching games; home or basevb, dens, denning or denned (intr) to live in or as if in a den[Old English denn; related to Old High German tenni threshing floor, early Dutch denne low ground, den, cave]den (dɛn) n., v. denned, den•ning. n. 1. the lair or shelter of a wild animal, esp. a predatory mammal. 2. a room in a home designed to provide a comfortable atmosphere for conversation, reading, etc. 3. a cave used as a place of shelter or concealment. 4. a squalid place: dens of misery. 5. one of the units of a Cub Scout pack. v.i. 6. to live in or as if in a den. [before 1000; Middle English; Old English denn, c. Middle Dutch, Middle Low German denne low ground, Old High German tenni floor] Den. Denmark. Den a wild beasts’ lair, hence, the beasts themselves.Examples: den of foxes, 1300; of lemur; of lions, 1380; of robbers, 1860; of snakes; of thieves, 1719; of tigers, 1400; of vice.den Past participle: denned Gerund: denning
Present |
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I den | you den | he/she/it dens | we den | you den | they den |
Preterite |
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I denned | you denned | he/she/it denned | we denned | you denned | they denned |
Present Continuous |
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I am denning | you are denning | he/she/it is denning | we are denning | you are denning | they are denning |
Present Perfect |
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I have denned | you have denned | he/she/it has denned | we have denned | you have denned | they have denned |
Past Continuous |
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I was denning | you were denning | he/she/it was denning | we were denning | you were denning | they were denning |
Past Perfect |
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I had denned | you had denned | he/she/it had denned | we had denned | you had denned | they had denned |
Future |
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I will den | you will den | he/she/it will den | we will den | you will den | they will den |
Future Perfect |
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I will have denned | you will have denned | he/she/it will have denned | we will have denned | you will have denned | they will have denned |
Future Continuous |
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I will be denning | you will be denning | he/she/it will be denning | we will be denning | you will be denning | they will be denning |
Present Perfect Continuous |
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I have been denning | you have been denning | he/she/it has been denning | we have been denning | you have been denning | they have been denning |
Future Perfect Continuous |
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I will have been denning | you will have been denning | he/she/it will have been denning | we will have been denning | you will have been denning | they will have been denning |
Past Perfect Continuous |
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I had been denning | you had been denning | he/she/it had been denning | we had been denning | you had been denning | they had been denning |
Conditional |
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I would den | you would den | he/she/it would den | we would den | you would den | they would den |
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I would have denned | you would have denned | he/she/it would have denned | we would have denned | you would have denned | they would have denned | ThesaurusNoun | 1. | den - the habitation of wild animals lairhabitation - the native habitat or home of an animal or plant | | 2. | den - a hiding place; usually a remote place used by outlawshideaway, hideouthiding place - a place suitable for hiding something (such as yourself) | | 3. | den - a unit of 8 to 10 cub scoutssocial unit, unit - an organization regarded as part of a larger social group; "the coach said the offensive unit did a good job"; "after the battle the soldier had trouble rejoining his unit" | | 4. | den - a room that is comfortable and secludeddwelling, dwelling house, habitation, home, abode, domicile - housing that someone is living in; "he built a modest dwelling near the pond"; "they raise money to provide homes for the homeless"room - an area within a building enclosed by walls and floor and ceiling; "the rooms were very small but they had a nice view" |
dennoun1. lair, hole, shelter, tunnel, lodge, cave, haunt, burrow, cavern, hide-out The skunk makes its den in burrows and hollow logs.2. (Chiefly U.S.) study, retreat, sanctuary, hideaway, cloister, snug, sanctum, cubbyhole, snuggery The walls of his den were covered in posters.3. haunt, resort, rendezvous, meeting place, hangout (informal), stamping ground, gathering place three illegal drinking densdennoun1. A place used as an animal's dwelling:burrow, hole, lair.2. A hiding place:covert, hideaway, hide-out, lair.Translationsden (den) noun1. the home of a wild beast. a lion's den. 獸穴 兽穴2. a private room for working in etc. 私室 私室den
beard the lionTo confront risk or danger head on, especially for the sake of possible personal gain. Refers to a proverb based on a Bible story from I Samuel, in which a shepherd, David, hunts down a lion that stole a lamb, grasps it by the beard, and kills it. Risks very often don't turn out well, but if you don't face them and beard the lion, you will never achieve the success you truly desire.See also: beard, lionthe lion's denA particularly dangerous, hostile, or oppressive place or situation, especially due to an angry or sinister person or group of people within it. I felt like I was walking into the lion's den when I went in front of the board for my annual review.See also: denbeard (one) in (one's) denTo confront risk or danger head on, especially for the sake of possible personal gain. The phrase is a variation of the Biblical proverb "beard the lion in his den." OK, who is going to beard the boss in his den and tell him that the deal isn't happening?See also: beard, denbeard the lion in his denTo confront risk or danger head on, especially for the sake of possible personal gain. Refers to a proverb based on a Bible story from I Samuel, in which a shepherd, David, hunts down a lion that stole a lamb, grasps it by the beard, and kills it. A risk very often doesn't turn out well, but if you don't face it and beard the lion in his den, you will never achieve the success you truly desire.See also: beard, den, lionden of iniquityA place where seedy activities happen. I'm not surprised to hear that the police raided that club again—it's a den of iniquity!See also: den, iniquity, ofwalk into the lion's denTo enter into a particularly dangerous, hostile, or oppressive place or situation, especially due to an angry or sinister person or group of people within it. I felt like I was walking into the lion's den when I went in front of the board for my annual review.See also: den, walkbeard the lion in his den and beard someone in his denProv. to confront someone on his or her own territory. I spent a week trying to reach Mr. Toynbee by phone, but his secretary always told me he was too busy to talk to me. Today I walked straight into his office and bearded the lion in his den. If the landlord doesn't contact us soon, we'll have to beard him in his den.See also: beard, den, lionden of iniquitya place filled with criminal activity or wickedness. The town was a den of iniquity and vice was everywhere. Police raided the gambling house, calling it a den of iniquity.See also: den, iniquity, ofbeard the lionConfront a danger, take a risk, as in I went straight to my boss, bearding the lion. This term was originally a Latin proverb based on a Bible story (I Samuel 17:35) about the shepherd David, who pursued a lion that had stolen a lamb, caught it by its beard, and killed it. By Shakespeare's time it was being used figuratively, as it is today. Sometimes the term is amplified to beard the lion in his den, which may combine the allusion with another Bible story, that of Daniel being shut in a lions' den for the night (Daniel 6:16-24). See also: beard, liona den of iniquity If a place is a den of iniquity, a lot of immoral things happen there. As time went on, he realised he was working in a den of iniquity and that the corruption spread right to the top of the organization.See also: den, iniquity, ofwalk into the lion's den COMMON If you walk into the lion's den, you deliberately place yourself in a dangerous or difficult situation. Confident that he had done no wrong, the Minister last night walked into the lion's den of his press accusers, looked them in the eye, and fought back. Note: Other verbs such as go, step, or venture can be used instead of walk. We need to win tonight's game, but we are going into the lion's den without one of our key men. Note: You can also say that someone is thrown or sent into the lion's den if they are put in a difficult or dangerous situation. She was eagerly accepted by the teaching agency, and thrown straight into the lion's den at a tough comprehensive school in Surrey. Note: This expression comes from the story in the Bible of Daniel, who was thrown into a den of lions because he refused to stop praying to God. However, he was protected by God and the lions did not hurt him. (Daniel 6) See also: den, walkbeard the lion in his den (or lair) confront or challenge someone on their own ground. This phrase developed partly from the idea of being daring enough to take a lion by the beard and partly from the use of beard as a verb to mean ‘face’, i.e. to face a lion in his den.See also: beard, den, lionthe lion's den a demanding, intimidating, or unpleasant place or situation.See also: dena den of iˈniquity/ˈvice (disapproving) a place where people do bad things: She thinks that just because we sit around smoking and drinking beer the club must be a real den of iniquity.See also: den, iniquity, ofthe ˌlion’s ˈden a difficult situation in which you have to face a person or people who are unfriendly or aggressive towards you: Before each one of her press conferences, she felt as if she were going into the lion’s den.This idiom comes from the story of Daniel in the Bible, who went into a lion’s den (= home) as a punishment but was not hurt by the lion.See also: denden of thieves, aA group of individuals or a place strongly suspected of underhanded dealings. This term appears in the Bible (Matthew 21:13) when Jesus, driving the moneychangers from the Temple, said, “My house shall be called the house of prayer; but ye have made it a den of thieves.” Daniel Defoe used the term in Robinson Crusoe, published in 1719, and by the late eighteenth century it was well known enough to be listed with other collective terms such as “House of Commons” in William Cobbett’s English Grammar in a discussion of syntax relating to pronouns.See also: den, ofDen
den1. the habitat or retreat of a lion or similar wild animal; lair 2. Scot a small wooded valley; dingle 3. Scot and northern English dialect a place of sanctuary in certain catching games; home or base Den’ (Day), a bourgeois, left-liberal daily newspaper published in Petrograd from 1912 to 1918. Among its contributors were bourgeois radicals (A. V. Amfiteatrov and N. P. Asheshov), Narodniks (Populists) and Socialist Revolutionaries (V. Bogucharskii, R. V. Ivanov-Razumnik, and S. D. Mstislavskii), and Menshevik-liquidators (D. I. Zaslavskii, St. Ivanovich, N. I. Iordanskii, and P. S. Iushkevich). The newspaper criticized tsarism and the bourgeois-pome shchik (landlord) parties from the liberal Menshevik position. During World War I it occupied a defensist position. After May 30 (June 12), 1917, Den’ became an organ of the Mensheviks. It supported the bourgeois Provisional Government and opposed the Bolsheviks. The newspaper reacted with hostility to the October Socialist Revolution. It was closed on Oct. 26 (Nov. 8), 1917, by the Petrograd Military Revolutionary Committee but for some time continued to publish under different names. It was finally closed in May 1918 for anti-Soviet propaganda.
Den the place where some mammals rest for a long time, hibernate, or raise their cubs. A den, unlike a burrow, is on the surface and usually in a secluded spot: in thick underbrush, among reeds, in a gully, beneath a cliff, or in a cave. Jackals, foxes, wolves, hyenas, tigers, lions, and wild boars build dens. A bear’s den is called berloga in Russian; a den occupied briefly is called lezhka. The latter is built by hares, rodents, and most ungulates. denAn indoor retreat, usually small, for work or leisure. also see chamber, 1.DEN(Directory Enabled Networks) The management of a network from a central depository of information about users, applications and network resources. Originally an initiative from Microsoft and Cisco, DEN was turned over to the DMTF in 1998, and its extensions were made part of the CIM specification in 1999. See WBEM, CIM and DMTF.DEN
DEN Abbreviation for: Delay Event Notice denervation Dengue virus Device Experience Network diethylnitrosamine Drug Experience Network doctors’ educational needs, see thereDEN
Acronym | Definition |
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DEN➣Denmark | DEN➣Denver (ammunition cartridge headstamp) | DEN➣Division of Engineering (various organizations) | DEN➣Denver Nuggets (basketball team) | DEN➣Distance Education Network | DEN➣Department of Energy | DEN➣Denote | DEN➣Denier (textiles; measuring unit for yarn; 1 gram per 9000 meters) | DEN➣Dengue Fever (flavivirus) | DEN➣Discovery Educator Network | DEN➣Digital Entertainment Network | DEN➣Diethylnitrosamine | DEN➣Document Enabled Network | DEN➣Dispatch Enhanced Network | DEN➣Digital Echo News | DEN➣Digital Education Network | DEN➣Directory Enabled Network | DEN➣Domestic Events Network | DEN➣Document Enabled Networking | DEN➣Digital Enhanced Network | DEN➣Data Element Number | DEN➣Denver, CO, USA - Denver International (Airport Code) | DEN➣Dictionary Entry Name | DEN➣Dewiek Elder Nation (gaming) | DEN➣Doctor's Educational Need (UK) |
den
Synonyms for dennoun lairSynonyms- lair
- hole
- shelter
- tunnel
- lodge
- cave
- haunt
- burrow
- cavern
- hide-out
noun studySynonyms- study
- retreat
- sanctuary
- hideaway
- cloister
- snug
- sanctum
- cubbyhole
- snuggery
noun hauntSynonyms- haunt
- resort
- rendezvous
- meeting place
- hangout
- stamping ground
- gathering place
Synonyms for dennoun a place used as an animal's dwellingSynonymsnoun a hiding placeSynonyms- covert
- hideaway
- hide-out
- lair
Synonyms for dennoun the habitation of wild animalsSynonymsRelated Wordsnoun a hiding placeSynonymsRelated Wordsnoun a unit of 8 to 10 cub scoutsRelated Wordsnoun a room that is comfortable and secludedRelated Words- dwelling
- dwelling house
- habitation
- home
- abode
- domicile
- room
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