BULLUN. See Bolland.
BURGAN. From bur-gan, the top of the down.
BURGESS. From berges, burges, a citizen, townsman; a Cornish form of the Fr. bourgeois.
BURGUS. See Bargus.
BURLACE, BURLAS. See Borlase.
BUSCOMB, BUSCUMBE, BOSCUMB. From bus-coomb, the dwelling in the valley.
BUSCREEGE. See Boscreege.
BUSSCOWEN. See Boscawan.
BUSVARGUS. From Busvargus in St. Just; from bus-var-gûs, the house or dwelling on the top of the wood.
BUSVEAL, BOSVEAL, BUSWELL. From Busveal in Gwennap; from bus-veal, the calves' house.
BUZZA. From bos-zâh, the dry dwelling; or bod-sau, the healthy abode.
C.
CALL. Hals derives this name from the Cornish-British call, cal, any hard, flinty, or obdurate matter or thing (probably from the character of the soil of the estate of the first owner). The Cornish cal also signifies cunning, sly. Lower suggests that Call may be from the Scotch name MacCall.
CALLARD. This name may be from Calartha, in Morvah; from cala-arth, the hard or difficult height.
CAMBORNE (De), CAMBOURNE (De). From Camborne, a town and parish in Penwith hundred, which Hals renders "a crooked or arched burne or well." Pryce trans-