Not in fact a misunderstanding of «word is bond». It means that something is a new and important idea. It has been in common usage at least since the release of the aptly titled Run DMC song «Word is Born» (1990).
Well I’m long gone, word is born…
by Fat Cass October 26, 2005
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word is born
A street saying equivalent to no cap. Only OGs use this one.
Friend: That was one hot chick
Me: Damn, word is born yo.
by ya boi 02aku February 3, 2020
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word is born
«Word is born» means «truth be told» or «the truth is spoken», as in the Logos (Greek, for «word») of the New Testament. «In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.» (John 1:1, NIV) And then the Word says, «I am the way and the truth and the life,» in John 14:6. Don’t any of you go to church?
I saw that bitch go down on the pastor at church—word is born, yo!
by JTavisO July 5, 2011
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word is born
As mentioned, a misunderstanding of ‘word is bond’; as in «I am giving you my word, and it is my bond.»
Isn’t language beatiful.
«Dude, that was sweet!»
«Word is born!»
«..did you just say born?!»
by nick November 13, 2003
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Word is born..son!
A New York slang that means or can be translated to: I’m telling you the truth… man
Commonly used in phrases of excitement and news telling or sharing thoughts
Word is born..son! they have the new kicks at DR JAYS!
by back in the dayz May 20, 2009
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Word is born
A trio of words that can mean the same thing universally like any other symbol, word, phrase, equation, sound, frequesncy, etc…..the question is not could we speak, but should we?
I speak therefor I am = Word is born
by Priestly Incense January 23, 2023
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More random definitions
Both born and borne are forms of bear. Born is commonly used with the sense of bear meaning «to give birth.» Borne is used in reference to carrying something (physically or figuratively), as a combining form with words like air, and, occasionally, in the «give birth to» sense.
It’s almost too cute to bear.
When sorting out the difference between born and borne, one confusing wrinkle is that both words originate from the same source: both are past tense forms of the verb bear. So how are they used differently?
Born is the common past-tense form of the verb meaning «to give birth.» It is often used in the passive voice:
She was born in a log cabin in March of 1817.
A lot of good ideas are born outside the workplace.
a movement born during the Renaissance
a law born out of necessity
sea-born breezes
The participle can also be an adjective meaning «originating from birth»:
My cousin is a born entertainer.
a Kansas-born writer
It is said by many that borne is used for all other senses of bear apart from that referring to giving birth. This is for the most part true. Crucially, borne is used for those instances that refer to carrying something, especially figuratively (like an idea or burden):
There are several reasons for the current uprising that must be borne in mind in order to figure out where to go from here.
— Ahmed Zewali, The New York Times, 2 Feb. 2011The report also examined the salmon farming industry in Canada, Norway and Chile, the other biggest global producers. It found that of the costs associated with fish farming, about 60% were borne by the producers, especially in the form of fish mortality and the cost of treating sea lice, but about 40% of the costs were borne by wider society, for instance in pollution, loss of fish populations and the impacts on the climate crisis.
— Fiona Harvey, The Guardian, 11 Feb. 2021Udall said one big reason for the drop was that many parents of the youngest children, seeing what was happening with the virus, simply decided to keep them home an extra year.
That is borne out by figures from the Department of Education: Of the more than 55,700 decline in children in public schools last year, close to 30 percent was in preschool and kindergarten programs.
— Howard Fischer, East Valley Tribune, 13 Apr. 2021
Borne is also frequently seen as a combining form to describe something that is carried or transmitted (as by a vehicle or insect):
keep your seatbelt fastened when we are airborne
illnesses caused by water-borne bacteria
wind-borne pollen
mosquito-borne diseases
However, it is also true that the spelling borne sees occasional use in the passive voice in the «to give birth to» sense:
Is that weird for you, for a project borne of such personal trauma to emerge into a world that’s so hungry for these kinds of stories?
— Julia Felsenthal, Vogue, 17 May 2017
As well as the active past participle:
Remarkably, Jackson supposedly made the comment that Peggy was “as chaste as a virgin!”, quite an accomplishment for a woman who had borne three children and had been married twice.
— The Knoxville Focus, 11 Aug. 2013
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This shows grade level based on the word’s complexity.
This shows grade level based on the word’s complexity.
adjective
brought forth by birth.
possessing from birth the quality, circumstances, or character stated: a born musician; a born fool.
native to the locale stated; immigrated to the present place from the locale stated: a German-born scientist; a Chicago-born New Yorker.
verb
a past participle of bear1.
QUIZ
CAN YOU ANSWER THESE COMMON GRAMMAR DEBATES?
There are grammar debates that never die; and the ones highlighted in the questions in this quiz are sure to rile everyone up once again. Do you know how to answer the questions that cause some of the greatest grammar debates?
Which sentence is correct?
Idioms about born
born yesterday, naive; inexperienced: You can’t fool me with that old trick—I wasn’t born yesterday.
Origin of born
First recorded before 1000; Middle English; Old English boren (past participle of beran “to give birth”), equivalent to bor- past participle stem + -en past participle suffix; see bear1, -en3
words often confused with born
Since the latter part of the 18th century, a distinction has been made between born and borne as past participles of the verb bear1 . Borne is the past participle in all senses that do not refer to physical birth: The wheatfields have borne abundantly this year. Judges have always borne a burden of responsibility. Borne is also the participle when the sense is “to bring forth (young)” and the focus is on the mother rather than on the child. In such cases, borne is preceded by a form of have or followed by by: Anna had borne a son the previous year. Two children borne by her earlier were already grown. When the focus is on the offspring or on something brought forth as if by birth, born is the standard spelling, and it occurs only in passive constructions: My friend was born in Ohio. No children have been born at the South Pole. A strange desire was born of the tragic experience. Born is also an adjective meaning “by birth,” “innate,” or “native”: born free; a born troublemaker; Mexican-born.
OTHER WORDS FROM born
pre·born, adjectiveself-born, adjective
WORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH born
born , borne (see confusables note at current entry)
Words nearby born
Borlaug, borlotti bean, borm, Borman, Bormann, born, borna disease, born-again, born-again Christian, born and bred, born-digital
Other definitions for born (2 of 2)
noun
Max, 1882–1970, German physicist: Nobel Prize 1954.
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Words related to born
constitutional, essential, natural, built-in, congenital, deep-seated, inborn, inbred, ingenerate, inherent, intrinsic
How to use born in a sentence
-
As Born had shown, you could merely predict the probabilities for the various possible outcomes, using calculations informed by the wave function that Schrödinger had introduced.
-
It wouldn’t be a stretch to say that Adele is a big reason why songs like Olivia Rodrigo’s “Drivers License,” Lewis Capaldi’s “Someone You Loved” and A Star is Born’s “Shallow” have clung to the charts for months on end.
-
As I observed in my book, it’s awfully hard to resist the charms of someone who can make you laugh, and families abound with stories of last-borns who are the clowns of the brood.
-
Second and later borns are much more invested in upending the system.
-
The influential al Qaeda propagandist, who was born in New Mexico, died in a U.S. drone strike later that year.
-
Cosby conspiracy theorists share a perspective born of a long, pained history of American racism.
-
A few months later, after their children were born, we visited the men and women again.
-
Yung Lean was born Jonatan Leandoer Håstad in Belarus, before moving to Sweden at the age of 3.
-
Little did I know that Lee had actually been born into a wealthy family.
-
To reproduce the impulse born of the thought—this is the aim of a psychological method.
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Elyon is the name of an ancient Phœnician god, slain by his son El, no doubt the “first-born of death” in Job xviii.
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In the spring of 1868 he was taken by his mother for a visit to England, and there, in the same year, his sister was born.
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This widening grasp of languages is or was within the capacity of nearly everyone born into the world—given the facilities.
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That embrace, that grin and that heart-born exclamation marked the entrance of the Pulsifer family into my life.
British Dictionary definitions for born (1 of 2)
verb
the past participle (in most passive uses) of bear 1 (def. 4)
was not born yesterday is not gullible or foolish
adjective
possessing or appearing to have possessed certain qualities from birtha born musician
- being at birth in a particular social status or other condition as specifiedignobly born
- (in combination)lowborn
in all one’s born days informal so far in one’s life
usage for born
Care should be taken not to use born where borne is intended: he had borne (not born) his ordeal with great courage; the following points should be borne in mind
British Dictionary definitions for born (2 of 2)
noun
Max . 1882–1970, British nuclear physicist, born in Germany, noted for his fundamental contribution to quantum mechanics: Nobel prize for physics 1954
Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition
© William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins
Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
Other Idioms and Phrases with born
In addition to the idioms beginning with born
- born and bred
- born under a lucky star
- born with a silver spoon
- born yesterday
also see:
- in all one’s born days
- not born yesterday
- to the manner born
The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary
Copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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Информация о песне На данной странице вы можете ознакомиться с текстом песни Word Is Born, исполнителя — Run DMC. Песня из альбома Back From Hell, в жанре Иностранный рэп и хип-хоп
Дата выпуска: 15.10.1990
Возрастные ограничения: 18+
Лейбл звукозаписи: Arista
Язык песни: Английский
Word Is Born(оригинал) |
1990, and this is what’s goin on |
to the break of dawn |
24/7, Run-D.M.C. |
in effect |
That’s ?? |
All those weak-rhymin, rewindin MC’s |
That means you pause |
My word is born |
Yeah, speakin on truth |
from the old school on down to the youth |
Since the days, that I was the age of |
«three»stop — listen to me |
This is how it used to be — «go!» |
Stand on another line, why? |
You did a crime now the time is mine |
I school you and your crew, why? |
Youse is my brother |
Stop — sellin and killin one another |
Take some time, to see what’s missin |
Brothers in the ?, we on a mission |
Thinkin back from the sale you made |
and back home, a grave is what your brother paid |
His life, because of a system |
Now you think you’re down, you cold dissed him |
Shut up, cause I’m fed up, with this culture |
And flyin high in the sky, a big vulture |
Waitin and debatin, to see who’s next |
for «brothers and sisters»of the opposite sex |
So hold on, keep it intact |
and go on, flow on, positive black |
B-boys be black be proud, right on |
«You know we’re bout to»be black |
and my word is born |
My word is born |
My word is born |
My word is born |
Let’s, let’s. |
Let’s begin to talk truth — it seems |
that y’all make a big out of things that are small |
We all play the same game for fame to claim |
?? |
bright lights and write your name |
They’ll soup you up, til you think you’re large |
Got a spot on tour, but I’m still in charge |
A big nigga’s hittin it, don’t renege |
Bust a rap like a cap like a snap of twig |
that extends from the hands of a branch on a tree |
Like you new jack rappers, run from me |
I got proof of truth, I cut and go raw |
(Word em up D!) My word is born |
And ain’t nuttin changed, PUNK! |
Слово Рождается(перевод) |
1990 год, и это то, что происходит |
до рассвета |
24/7, Run-D.M.C. |
в результате |
Это ?? |
Все эти слабые рифмы, перематывающие МС |
Это означает, что вы делаете паузу |
Мое слово рождается |
Да, говорю правду |
от старой школы до молодежи |
С тех пор, как я был в возрасте |
«три» стоп — послушай меня |
Вот как это было раньше — «иди!» |
Встать на другую линию, почему? |
Ты совершил преступление, теперь мое время |
Я учу тебя и твою команду, почему? |
Юсе мой брат |
Стоп — продавать и убивать друг друга |
Потратьте некоторое время, чтобы увидеть, чего не хватает |
Братья в ?, мы на миссии |
Подумайте о продаже, которую вы сделали |
а дома могила — это то, что заплатил твой брат |
Его жизнь из-за системы |
Теперь ты думаешь, что ты подавлен, ты холодно его раскритиковал |
Заткнись, потому что я сыт по горло этой культурой |
И летит высоко в небе большой стервятник |
Ожидание и обсуждение, чтобы увидеть, кто следующий |
для «братьев и сестер» противоположного пола |
Так что держись, держи его в целости |
и давай, течь, позитивный черный |
B-boys быть черным, гордиться, прямо сейчас |
«Вы знаете, что мы собираемся стать черными |
и мое слово рождается |
Мое слово рождается |
Мое слово рождается |
Мое слово рождается |
Давайте, давайте. |
Давайте начнем говорить правду — кажется, |
что вы все делаете большое из вещей, которые маленькие |
Мы все играем в одну и ту же игру, чтобы претендовать на славу. |
?? |
яркий свет и написать свое имя |
Они будут вас подкармливать, пока вы не подумаете, что вы большой |
Есть место в туре, но я все еще главный |
Большой ниггер попал в него, не отказывайся |
Разорви рэп, как шапку, как щепку ветки |
который простирается от рук ветки на дереве |
Как и вы, новые джек-рэперы, бегите от меня. |
У меня есть доказательство правды, я режу и иду сырым |
(Word em up D!) Мое слово рождается |
И ничего не изменилось, ПАНК! |
Рейтинг перевода: 5
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