"On another occasion, when I repeated one of my mother’s frequently uttered reproaches by gravely announcing, ‘Du host mir bagrobn’ (‘You have buried me’), my parents could not refrain from bursting into laughter." (source)
Burying a gentile was bagrobn, a Germanic word related to English 'grave'; burying a Jew was more often mekaber zayn or brengen tsu kvure, from Hebrew kavar, 'bury,' and k’vurá, 'burial.'" (source)