Talk:Burgomaster

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This page has been transwikied to Wiktionary.
The article has content that is useful at Wiktionary. Therefore the article can be found at either here or here (logs 1 logs 2.)

Note: This means that the article has been copied to the Wiktionary Transwiki namespace for evaluation and formatting. It does not mean that the article is in the Wiktionary main namespace, or that it has been removed from Wikipedia's. Furthermore, the Wiktionarians might delete the article from Wiktionary if they do not find it to be appropriate for the Wiktionary.

Removing this tag will usually trigger CopyToWiktionaryBot to re-transwiki the entry. This article should have been removed from Category:Copy to Wiktionary and should not be re-added there.

I'd say this belongs in Wiktionary. The term looks to be the English derivative of the German burgermeister [1], and seems to be of limited scope. --Laura Scudder | Talk 06:26, 21 Jun 2005 (UTC)

[edit] Where is this word used?

Where (which countries or in what languages) is this term used?RJFJR 04:09, September 1, 2005 (UTC)

Why, in Anglophone countries of course, as it is an English word :o). But, being derived from Dutch burgemeester ("master of the burough") it is typically used in a historical context to refer to mayors of "Dutch" (in the widest sense, including Flemish and German) towns. High German has the related der Bürgermeister. The citizens of his town are the burghers, from Dutch burgers. It's all so neat and quaint. In the 17th century the British felt a need to compensate their inferiority complex. --MWAK 15:42, 13 September 2005 (UTC)

[edit] I`d say merge with Mayor

It doesn´t have much content of its own, its meaning seems to be synonym to me by all means (and I´m a native speaker of english and german), and I find it makes interwiki links more complicated to have both the terms seperate (as in Germany for example, which do you then link to from "Bürgermeister" ?). Regards Sean Heron 07:13, 14 June 2007 (UTC)

    No, a mayor is a ruler of people but a burgermeister is a ruler of burgers.  —Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.154.80.77 (talk) 23:42, 31 December 2007 (UTC)