What's the difference between bazaar and burse?

Bazaar


Definition:

  • (n.) Alt. of Bazar

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Millions and millions of people are happy because Rouhani won,” said businessman Ahad Esmaili, 31, one of a crowd breaking into dance at a spontaneous celebration in the heart of Tehran’s crowded bazaar, when the final figures were announced.
  • (2) A former intern's case against Harper's Bazaar is moving through the courts.
  • (3) It had a magnitude of 7.3 and struck about 42 miles (68km) west ofthe town of Namche Bazaar, close to Mount Everest.
  • (4) The Lib Dems hit back at Verhofstadt after the leader of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (ALDE), called for the EU to be given powers to raise its own revenues as a way of ending what he called "this Turkish bazaar" in the negotiations.
  • (5) They have a sort of stubbornness.” He later deals with hecklers at a Fifa HQ press event : “Listen, gentlemen, we are not in a bazaar .
  • (6) Opera House and Zaveri Bazaar were also targeted in attacks which left a total of 26 people dead.
  • (7) Those that do make it to makeshift camps in the town of Cox’s Bazaar are facing shortages of food and water, and some are suffering from severe malnutrition.
  • (8) In the capital, burnt-out buildings and vehicles were still smouldering in the area around the grand bazaar, where violence broke out.
  • (9) The unspun version Asked by Harper's Bazaar magazine to pick her 21st-century heroine, she chose serial servant-beater Naomi Campbell.
  • (10) Yet that entire grand bazaar of old summer chemistry is all blended to me now and I can pick out just one: the first whiff of autumn.
  • (11) SCMP Group also owns the Hong Kong editions of magazines Esquire, Elle, Cosmopolitan and Harper’s Bazaar.
  • (12) Various of the planned central buildings were realised on both sides: the clustered, sculptural forms of the Cyril and Methodius University and the extraordinary Opera and Ballet Theatre , both designed by Slovenian architects, and from Macedonian designers, the Telecommunications Centre – a strange, individualistic example of organic brutalism – and the Trade Centre: a long, low shopping centre of overlapping terraces stepping subtly down to the river, its combination of enclosure and openness inspired by the structure of the bazaar.
  • (13) In the Sherpa town of Namche Bazaar, he says, a new five-mile pipeline is being laid to bring water to service the growing tourist demand for showers and flush toilets.
  • (14) Appraising his shabby suit, the jeweller suggests he pick up something cheaper from the local bazaar.
  • (15) It had taken me a week to track down the underground dervish scene in Istanbul - the only dervish contact I had in the city was a carpet-seller called Abdullah deep in the bazaar.
  • (16) Money talks, especially in the bustle of an Indian bazaar.
  • (17) But the bombers targeted an area with a bazaar and bus station where there are few foreigners.
  • (18) The Vogue publisher, Stephen Quinn, fired a salvo last week in anticipation of NatMags title Harper's Bazaar's improved circulation.
  • (19) The tale is an early version, originally written for Harper's Bazaar magazine but withdrawn before publication, of The Catcher in the Rye.
  • (20) Harper's Bazaar was up 1.1% year-on-year to 110,638.

Burse


Definition:

  • (n.) A purse; also, a vesicle; a pod; a hull.
  • (n.) A fund or foundation for the maintenance of needy scholars in their studies; also, the sum given to the beneficiaries.
  • (n.) An ornamental case of hold the corporal when not in use.
  • (n.) An exchange, for merchants and bankers, in the cities of continental Europe. Same as Bourse.
  • (n.) A kind of bazaar.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) About twenty five dissections of the forefoot, we have precised the presence of serosis burses, upper the profound transversal intermetatarsus ligament, in the intercapito metatarsus region.
  • (2) In precising the situation and the anatomic characteristics of these burses, this study contributes to clarify the etiology of some inflammatory or static pains of the foot.
  • (3) The omental dialysis is an elimination procedure of active pancreatic enzymes from the omental burse.
  • (4) These burses, recently described by Bossley (New Zealand), are not described in the classical anatomic books.