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- From the verb den: (⇒ conjugate)
- dens is: ⓘClick the infinitive to see all available inflections
- v 3rd person singular
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2026dens
(denz),USA pronunciation n., pl. den•tes (den′tēz).USA pronunciation [Zool.]
- Zoologya tooth or toothlike part.
WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2026den /dɛn/USA pronunciation
n. [countable]
- Biology, Zoologythe home or shelter of a wild animal:the lion's den.
- a room in a home providing an informal atmosphere for conversation, reading, etc.
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2026den
(den),USA pronunciation n., v., denned, den•ning. n.
- Biology, Zoologythe lair or shelter of a wild animal, esp. a predatory mammal.
- a room, often secluded, in a house or apartment, designed to provide a quiet, comfortable, and informal atmosphere for conversation, reading, writing, etc.
- a cave used as a place of shelter or concealment.
- a squalid or vile abode or place:dens of misery.
- one of the units of a cub scout pack, analogous to a patrol in the Boy Scouts.
v.t.
- to drive or pursue (an animal) into its den.
- to kill (an animal) inside its den.
v.i.
- to live in or as if in a den.
- bef. 1000; Middle English; Old English denn; compare early Dutch denne floor, cave, den, German Tenne floor
Den., - Denmark.
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
den /dɛn/ n - the habitat or retreat of a lion or similar wild animal; lair
- a small or secluded room in a home, often used for carrying on a hobby
- a squalid or wretched room or retreat
- a site or haunt: a den of vice
- Scot a small wooded valley; dingle
vb (dens, denning, denned)- (intransitive) to live in or as if in a den
Etymology: Old English denn; related to Old High German tenni threshing floor, early Dutch denne low ground, den, cave
'dens' also found in these entries (note: many are not synonyms or translations):
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