But very soon he grew to like it, for the Boy used to talk to him, and made nice tunnels for him under the bedclothes that he said were like the burrows the real rabbits lived in.
If an animal burrows into the ground or into a surface, it moves through it by making a tunnel or hole. The larvae burrow into cracks in the floor. = tunnel
A large underground space, usually dug out for the purpose of creating a small town Burrows are inhabited solely by humans, and are most commonly found beneath the capital city of Phaeran Varying in size, they are usually supported with metal struts and created in areas where underground rocks can form part of the walls and cieling Burrows are networked via runs
If you burrow into something, you move underneath it or press against it, usually in order to feel warmer or safer. She turned her face away from him, burrowing into her heap of covers. a passage in the ground made by an animal such as a rabbit or fox as a place to live
[ 'b&r-(")O; 'b&-(")rO ] (noun.) 13th century. Origin Unknown. Formally, it appears to be a variant of borough, but this sense is not known in Old English burh or in any Germanic cognate languages.