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  1. The Burying the Hatchet ceremony happened in Nova Scotia on June 25, 1761. It ended more than seventy-five years of war between the British and the Mi'kmaq.

  2. bury the hatchet | American Dictionary. idiom. Add to word list. to agree to end the disagreement that has divided two people or groups: After years of fighting over who should have gotten Dad's money, my brothers finally buried the hatchet. (Definition of bury the hatchet from the Cambridge Academic Content Dictionary © Cambridge University Press)

  3. To bury the hatchett is to settle your differences with an adversary. What's the origin of the phrase 'Bury the hatchet'? The supposed language of Native Americans that we are familiar with is largely the invention of Hollywood scriptwriters – ‘white man speak with forked tongue’, ‘kemo sabe’ etc.

  4. Oct 19, 2021 · Today, burying the hatchet stands for settling an old score, resolving an argument or making peace with an enemy – but it once had a more literal meaning... The expression comes from a centuries-old practice involving the literal burying of a hatchet, seen among the Native American tribes of North America.

  5. bury the hatchet. Meaning. to stop fighting or arguing or to end old resentments. make peace and end a quarrel, settle one’s differences to become friends again. refers to finally deciding to end an ongoing conflict and thus creating a friendly relationship.

  6. Meaning of Idiom ‘Bury the Hatchet’. To bury the hatchet means to make peace; to settle one’s difference; to stop arguing or fighting; to put an end to old resentments. 1, 2. Bury the Hatchet Idiom Meaning.

  7. When people who have argued bury the hatchet, they agree to forget their argument and become friends again. Note: A hatchet is a small axe. They had finally buried the hatchet after their falling-out.

  8. What Does the Saying “Bury the Hatchet” Mean? To bury the hatchet is an American English idiomatic expression that means to make peace. It is considered an idiom because we use its figurative definition over its literal meaning. When you and your long-time enemy are burying the hatchet, you forgive each other and reconcile.

  9. Bury the hatchet. This expression meaning to settle ones differences with erstwhile adversaries has been around since the 17th century and comes from the practice of North American Indian tribes who literally buried war hatchets to signify that peace accords had been reached.

  10. The idiom “bury the hatchet” means to end a quarrel or disagreement and make peace. It is thought to have originated among Native American tribes in North America. In some Native American cultures, it was a common practice for two warring tribes to bury a hatchet as a symbol of their truce.