0 past simple and past participle of burrow --
1 to dig a hole in the ground, especially to live in: --
Arthropleurids lived in the moist coal swamps that were common at the time and may have burrowed in the undergrowth.
The remaining four radicals burrowed into a pile of futon bedding and refused to surrender.
The young larvae, ammocoetes, spend several years in the rivers, where they live burrowed in fine sediment, filter feeding on detritus and microorganisms.
Old and newer mining operations have burrowed under schools and under whole communities.
Those were the difficulties that we found ourselves in, and so our committees went on burrowing forward industriously, and the more we burrowed the less could we see.
Today we humans have burrowed deep.
They had burrowed in—so that he had not found a hole—and had cleared the pond.
We burrowed away, and the conclusions that we reached are spelt out in the latter half of the report.