{ "Bushehr":{ "antonyms":[], "definitions":{ "city and port on the Persian Gulf in southwestern Iran population 120,787":[] }, "examples":[], "first_known_use":{}, "history_and_etymology":{}, "pronounciation":[ "b\u00fc-\u02c8sher" ], "synonym_discussion":"", "synonyms":[], "time_of_retrieval":"20220707-020058", "type":[ "geographical name" ] }, "bus":{ "antonyms":[], "definitions":{ ": a large motor vehicle designed to carry passengers usually along a fixed route according to a schedule":[ "took the bus to work", "double-decker buses", "waiting at the bus stop" ], ": a set of parallel conductors (see conductor sense d(1) ) in a computer system that forms a main transmission path":[], ": a small hand truck":[], ": a spacecraft or missile that carries one or more detachable devices (such as warheads )":[], ": automobile":[], ": bus bar":[], ": clear sense 4d":[ "bus dishes" ], ": to criticize, blame, or punish (someone in a vulnerable position) especially in order to avoid blame or gain an advantage":[ "\u2026 we will not throw any student under the bus for instant restoration of our image or our reputation.", "\u2014 Donna Shalala", "But he went out of his way to make clear that this one wasn't really on him. The problem lay with underlings, whom he quickly threw under the bus .", "\u2014 Rem Rieder" ], ": to remove dirty dishes from":[ "bus tables" ], ": to transport by bus":[ "busing kids to school", "Students were bused in for the game." ], ": to travel by a large motor vehicle designed to carry passengers usually along a fixed route according to a schedule : to travel by bus":[], ": to work as a busboy":[], "business":[] }, "examples":[ "Noun", "She boarded a bus in Nashville.", "Are you traveling by train or by bus ", "Verb", "He buses tables at the local diner.", "Recent Examples on the Web: Noun", "More than 51,000 people in Georgia plan to travel by bus , train or cruise for the Independence Day weekend, according to the AAA forecast. \u2014 Kelly Yamanouchi, ajc , 21 June 2022", "It's estimated there will be 3.55 million people traveling by air for the weekend, and 2.42 million people will travel by bus , train or cruise. \u2014 Jordan Mendoza, USA TODAY , 21 June 2022", "Finding the right people for your bus and seating them appropriately makes your business resilient and agile\u2014two qualities necessary for startups. \u2014 Dr. Eric George, Forbes , 15 June 2022", "Granted early release from the Army to study photography at the San Francisco Art Institute, Brand packed up his VW bus and, in August 1962, lit out for the Bay Area. \u2014 Benjamin Kunkel, The New Republic , 14 June 2022", "By the bus , hugs were prevalent and tears were shed. \u2014 Scott Springer, The Enquirer , 10 June 2022", "That morning, Hart, who worked as a school bus driver at the time, happened to see her daughter on her way into the high school while Hart was saying goodbye to the kids on her bus . \u2014 Kc Baker, PEOPLE.com , 8 June 2022", "None have a car, and trekking back to Langue de Barbarie can take two hours by bus . \u2014 Washington Post , 5 June 2022", "In addition to driving, about 320,000 Southern Californians are expected to fly over the weekend and another 165,000 will travel by bus , train or take a cruise. \u2014 Rob Nikolewski, San Diego Union-Tribune , 26 May 2022", "Recent Examples on the Web: Verb", "The Jewish Agency, an organization which runs the hotline and that helps Jews immigrate to Israel, has been helping to bus Jews in Ukraine to hotels in Poland, Moldova, Hungary and Romania. \u2014 Los Angeles Times , 15 Mar. 2022", "Texas Republicans, Democrats call out Gov. Abbott's plan to bus migrants to D.C. \u2014 Ariana Garcia, Chron , 14 Apr. 2022", "That left enough time to head to the hotel for a quick meal and then bus to the Kohl Center. \u2014 Jeff Potrykus, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel , 5 Feb. 2022", "Brey has remained one of Blakeney\u2019s close friends and agreed to bus his team 4-plus hours north after a Saturday game at Virginia Tech to play Howard. \u2014 Stephen Borelli, USA TODAY , 11 Feb. 2022", "The other six women head off for the ceremony, and send the shuttle bus back to pick up Mary. \u2014 Scott D. Pierce, The Salt Lake Tribune , 16 Jan. 2022", "Brandon can\u2019t remain a head coach driving the team bus down this road and stopping to throw his players under it. \u2014 Nick Canepa Columnist, San Diego Union-Tribune , 15 Jan. 2022", "In all, more than 109 million people will drive, fly or bus out of town. \u2014 Taylor Pettaway, San Antonio Express-News , 20 Dec. 2021", "And would bus lanes replacing on-street parking from Bowdoin to Charles Circle on Cambridge Street be more effective" ], "first_known_use":{ "1835, in the meaning defined at sense 1a":"Noun", "circa 1909, in the meaning defined at intransitive sense 1":"Verb" }, "history_and_etymology":{ "short for omnibus":"Noun and Verb" }, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8b\u0259s" ], "synonym_discussion":"", "synonyms":[ "auto", "automobile", "car", "horseless carriage", "machine", "motor", "motor vehicle", "motorcar", "wheels" ], "time_of_retrieval":"20220707-104140", "type":[ "abbreviation", "noun", "verb" ] }, "bush":{ "antonyms":[ "bad", "bastard", "bush-league", "crummy", "crumby", "deficient", "dissatisfactory", "ill", "inferior", "lame", "lousy", "off", "paltry", "poor", "punk", "sour", "suboptimal", "subpar", "substandard", "unacceptable", "unsatisfactory", "wack", "wanting", "wretched", "wrong" ], "definitions":{ "1890\u20131974 American electrical engineer":[ "Van*ne*var \\ v\u0259-\u200b\u02c8n\u0113-\u200bv\u0259r \\" ], ": a bunch of ivy formerly hung outside a tavern to indicate wine for sale":[], ": a close thicket of shrubs suggesting a single plant":[], ": a large uncleared or sparsely settled area (as in Australia) usually scrub-covered or forested : wilderness":[ "\u2014 usually used with the" ], ": advertising":[ "good wine needs no bush", "\u2014 William Shakespeare" ], ": bushing":[], ": falling below acceptable standards : unprofessional":[ "bush behavior" ], ": having a low-growing compact bushy habit":[ "\u2014 used especially of cultivated beans bush snap beans" ], ": minor league":[ "\u2014 usually used in plural spent ten years in the bushes" ], ": serving, occurring in, or used in the bush":[ "bush planes" ], ": tavern":[], ": to extend like a bush : resemble a bush":[], ": to support, mark, or protect with bushes":[], "George (Herbert Walker) 1924\u20132018 American politician; vice president of the U.S. (1981\u201389); 41st president of the U.S. (1989\u201393)":[], "George W(alker) 1946\u2013 son of George H. W. Bush American politician; 43rd president of the U.S. (2001\u201309)":[] }, "examples":[], "first_known_use":{ "14th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1a":"Noun", "1566, in the meaning defined above":"Noun", "1595, in the meaning defined at sense 1":"Adjective", "15th century, in the meaning defined at transitive sense":"Verb", "1959, in the meaning defined above":"Adjective" }, "history_and_etymology":{ "Dutch bus bushing, box, from Middle Dutch busse box, from Late Latin buxis \u2014 more at box entry 1":"Noun", "Middle English bussh, bosch, buissh \"woods, thicket, underbrush, shrub, underbrush concealing a hunter or fighter,\" going back to Old English *busc, going back to Germanic *buska- (perhaps also beside an earlier u-stem *busku- ) (whence also Old Saxon -busc in br\u0101malbusk \"bramble bush,\" Middle Dutch bosch, busch \"forest, bunch, bundle,\" Old High German busc, bosc \"shrub, bramble bush, thicket, grove,\" Old Swedish buske \"bush,\" Old Norse [Norway] busk\u00e6r, a nickname, probably \"the bushy-haired one,\" Old Icelandic Buski, name for a dog, probably \"the bristly one\"), of uncertain origin; (sense 2) probably after Dutch bosch in this sense":"Noun", "derivative of bush entry 1":"Verb", "from attributive use of bush entry 1":"Adjective", "short for bush-league":"Adjective" }, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8bu\u0307sh" ], "synonym_discussion":"", "synonyms":[ "backcountry", "backland(s)", "backwater", "backwoods", "frontier", "hinterland", "outback", "outlands", "up-country" ], "time_of_retrieval":"20220707-044531", "type":[ "adjective", "biographical name", "noun", "verb" ] }, "bush elephant":{ "antonyms":[], "definitions":{ ": savanna elephant":[ "Weighing as much as 14 tons and standing up to 13 feet high, the African bush elephant is the largest land mammal.", "\u2014 Holly Prestidge , Richmond (Virginia) Times Dispatch , 5 May 2013" ] }, "examples":[], "first_known_use":{ "1922, in the meaning defined above":"" }, "history_and_etymology":{}, "pronounciation":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "synonyms":[], "time_of_retrieval":"20220706-201111", "type":[ "noun" ] }, "bush leaguer":{ "antonyms":[ "acceptable", "adequate", "all right", "decent", "fine", "OK", "okay", "passable", "respectable", "satisfactory", "standard", "tolerable" ], "definitions":{ ": being of an inferior class or group of its kind : marked by a lack of sophistication or professionalism":[], ": minor league":[] }, "examples":[ "Recent Examples on the Web: Noun", "Sure, the Bucs are trying to get ready for the playoffs, but this was bush league . \u2014 Carlos Monarrez, Detroit Free Press , 26 Dec. 2020", "In contemporary universities, in the social sciences and humanities, calling oneself Dr. is thought bush league . \u2014 Joseph Epstein, WSJ , 11 Dec. 2020", "The chief antagonist to these concerned scientists is Edward Teller (Joel Basman), the most fervent advocate for the construction of a hydrogen bomb that would make the atomic blasts in Japan seem almost bush league . \u2014 Stephen Farber, The Hollywood Reporter , 17 Jan. 2020", "Highlighting only Kitchens\u2019 blunders when calling identical plays and hiding his successes is deceitful and bush league . \u2014 Ellis L. Williams, cleveland , 17 Oct. 2019", "Not to be outdone, Richard Mille, grand master of alternative material innovation, is at the final stage of crafting a watch case from a material that relegates even unobtanium to the bush leagues by its sheer badassitude. \u2014 Wei Koh, A-LIST , 3 Apr. 2018", "The other maddening thing is that the Zinke scandal seems almost bush league in the swampy World Series of corruption that is Donald Trump\u2019s Washington. \u2014 Will Bunch, Philly.com , 5 Oct. 2017" ], "first_known_use":{ "1902, in the meaning defined above":"Noun", "1908, in the meaning defined above":"Adjective" }, "history_and_etymology":{}, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8bu\u0307sh-\u02ccl\u0113g" ], "synonym_discussion":"", "synonyms":[ "bad", "bastard", "bush", "crummy", "crumby", "deficient", "dissatisfactory", "ill", "inferior", "lame", "lousy", "off", "paltry", "poor", "punk", "sour", "suboptimal", "subpar", "substandard", "unacceptable", "unsatisfactory", "wack", "wanting", "wretched", "wrong" ], "time_of_retrieval":"20220707-200745", "type":[ "adjective", "noun" ] }, "bush vetch":{ "antonyms":[], "definitions":{ ": a European purple-flowered vetch ( Vicia sepium ) with slender stems that occurs as a weed in hedgerows":[] }, "examples":[], "first_known_use":{}, "history_and_etymology":{}, "pronounciation":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "synonyms":[], "time_of_retrieval":"20220706-130818", "type":[ "noun" ] }, "bush warbler":{ "antonyms":[], "definitions":{ ": any of various chiefly tropical warblers (family Sylviidae) of open or brushy country":[] }, "examples":[], "first_known_use":{}, "history_and_etymology":{}, "pronounciation":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "synonyms":[], "time_of_retrieval":"20220706-195023", "type":[ "noun" ] }, "bush willow":{ "antonyms":[], "definitions":{ ": a small deciduous tree ( Combretum apiculatum ) 15 to 20 feet high that is a common constituent of the Transvaal bushveld":[], ": a small tree ( Combretum erythrophyllum ) bearing 4-winged fruits and usually growing on the banks of streams":[], ": any of a number of southern African trees of the genus Combretum : such as":[] }, "examples":[], "first_known_use":{}, "history_and_etymology":{}, "pronounciation":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "synonyms":[], "time_of_retrieval":"20220706-180120", "type":[ "noun" ] }, "bush-league":{ "antonyms":[ "acceptable", "adequate", "all right", "decent", "fine", "OK", "okay", "passable", "respectable", "satisfactory", "standard", "tolerable" ], "definitions":{ ": being of an inferior class or group of its kind : marked by a lack of sophistication or professionalism":[], ": minor league":[] }, "examples":[ "Recent Examples on the Web: Noun", "Sure, the Bucs are trying to get ready for the playoffs, but this was bush league . \u2014 Carlos Monarrez, Detroit Free Press , 26 Dec. 2020", "In contemporary universities, in the social sciences and humanities, calling oneself Dr. is thought bush league . \u2014 Joseph Epstein, WSJ , 11 Dec. 2020", "The chief antagonist to these concerned scientists is Edward Teller (Joel Basman), the most fervent advocate for the construction of a hydrogen bomb that would make the atomic blasts in Japan seem almost bush league . \u2014 Stephen Farber, The Hollywood Reporter , 17 Jan. 2020", "Highlighting only Kitchens\u2019 blunders when calling identical plays and hiding his successes is deceitful and bush league . \u2014 Ellis L. Williams, cleveland , 17 Oct. 2019", "Not to be outdone, Richard Mille, grand master of alternative material innovation, is at the final stage of crafting a watch case from a material that relegates even unobtanium to the bush leagues by its sheer badassitude. \u2014 Wei Koh, A-LIST , 3 Apr. 2018", "The other maddening thing is that the Zinke scandal seems almost bush league in the swampy World Series of corruption that is Donald Trump\u2019s Washington. \u2014 Will Bunch, Philly.com , 5 Oct. 2017" ], "first_known_use":{ "1902, in the meaning defined above":"Noun", "1908, in the meaning defined above":"Adjective" }, "history_and_etymology":{}, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8bu\u0307sh-\u02ccl\u0113g" ], "synonym_discussion":"", "synonyms":[ "bad", "bastard", "bush", "crummy", "crumby", "deficient", "dissatisfactory", "ill", "inferior", "lame", "lousy", "off", "paltry", "poor", "punk", "sour", "suboptimal", "subpar", "substandard", "unacceptable", "unsatisfactory", "wack", "wanting", "wretched", "wrong" ], "time_of_retrieval":"20220707-092152", "type":[ "adjective", "noun" ] }, "bushed":{ "antonyms":[ "unwearied" ], "definitions":{ ": covered with or as if with a bushy growth":[], ": having a bushing":[], ": lost especially in the bush":[], ": perplexed sense 1 , confused":[], ": tired , exhausted":[] }, "examples":[], "first_known_use":{ "14th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1":"Adjective", "1907, in the meaning defined above":"Adjective" }, "history_and_etymology":{}, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8bu\u0307sht" ], "synonym_discussion":"", "synonyms":[ "all in", "aweary", "beat", "beaten", "bleary", "burned-out", "burnt-out", "dead", "done", "drained", "exhausted", "fatigued", "jaded", "knackered", "limp", "logy", "loggy", "played out", "pooped", "prostrate", "spent", "tapped out", "tired", "tuckered (out)", "washed-out", "wearied", "weary", "wiped out", "worn", "worn-out" ], "time_of_retrieval":"20220706-164038", "type":[ "adjective" ] }, "bushel":{ "type":[ "noun", "verb" ], "definitions":{ ": any of various units of dry capacity \u2014 see Weights and Measures Table":[], ": a container holding a bushel":[], ": a large quantity":[ "bushels of money" ], ": repair , renovate":[] }, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8bu\u0307-sh\u0259l" ], "synonyms":[ "abundance", "barrel", "basketful", "boatload", "bucket", "bunch", "bundle", "carload", "chunk", "deal", "dozen", "fistful", "gobs", "good deal", "heap", "hundred", "lashings", "lashins", "loads", "lot", "mass", "mess", "mountain", "much", "multiplicity", "myriad", "oodles", "pack", "passel", "peck", "pile", "plateful", "plenitude", "plentitude", "plenty", "pot", "potful", "profusion", "quantity", "raft", "reams", "scads", "sheaf", "shipload", "sight", "slew", "spate", "stack", "store", "ton", "truckload", "volume", "wad", "wealth", "yard" ], "antonyms":[ "ace", "bit", "dab", "dram", "driblet", "glimmer", "handful", "hint", "lick", "little", "mite", "mouthful", "nip", "ounce", "peanuts", "pinch", "pittance", "scruple", "shade", "shadow", "smidgen", "smidgeon", "smidgin", "smidge", "speck", "spot", "sprinkle", "sprinkling", "strain", "streak", "suspicion", "tad", "taste", "touch", "trace" ], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[ "Noun", "picked up a bushel of decorations at the after-Christmas sale", "Recent Examples on the Web: Noun", "Corn futures trade at $8 per bushel , the highest price in a decade. \u2014 CBS News , 19 June 2022", "Global wheat prices spiked 6%, with futures trading in Chicago hitting $12.40 per bushel , the highest price in two months. \u2014 Julia Horowitz, CNN , 17 May 2022", "Lake Meadow Naturals in Ocoee has doubled from $4 or $4.50 a bushel a year ago to $8 or $9 in May. \u2014 Austin Fuller, Orlando Sentinel , 26 May 2022", "Soft red winter wheat for July delivery locked in at $12.39 a bushel after rising as high as $12.47, its highest level since mid-March. \u2014 Harold Maass, The Week , 16 May 2022", "Until recently, that drought a decade ago was the only time that corn cost more than $8 a bushel . \u2014 Ryan Dezember, WSJ , 28 Apr. 2022", "The status of nobility had been diluted by the new titles that Napoleon and Leopold II handed out by the bushel as favors to friends and courtiers\u2014not to mention the many fake ones that social climbing parvenus conferred upon themselves. \u2014 Tom Sancton, Town & Country , 31 Mar. 2022", "Insect plagues were of such severity that farmers were paid by the bushel for locust corpses. \u2014 Thomas Meaney, The New Republic , 30 Mar. 2022", "Russia and Ukraine harvest more than a quarter of the world\u2019s wheat, which has ramped 50% in price this year, to more than $12 per bushel \u2014 levels not seen since 2008. \u2014 Christopher Helman, Forbes , 7 Mar. 2022" ], "history_and_etymology":{ "Middle English busshel , from Anglo-French bussel, buschelle , from Old French boisse measure of grain, of Celtic origin; akin to Middle Irish boss breadth of the hand":"Noun", "probably from German bosseln to do poor work, to patch; akin to Old English b\u0113atan to beat":"Verb" }, "first_known_use":{ "14th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1":"Noun", "circa 1877, in the meaning defined above":"Verb" }, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-064635" }, "bushelage":{ "antonyms":[], "definitions":{ ": amount in bushels":[] }, "examples":[], "first_known_use":{}, "history_and_etymology":{ "bushel entry 1 + -age":"" }, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8bu\u0307sh\u0259lij" ], "synonym_discussion":"", "synonyms":[], "time_of_retrieval":"20220707-003406", "type":[ "noun" ] }, "bushelful":{ "antonyms":[], "definitions":{ ": as much as a bushel will hold":[] }, "examples":[], "first_known_use":{}, "history_and_etymology":{}, "pronounciation":[ "-sh\u0259l\u02ccfu\u0307l" ], "synonym_discussion":"", "synonyms":[], "time_of_retrieval":"20220707-005651", "type":[ "noun" ] }, "bushelman":{ "antonyms":[], "definitions":{ ": busheler":[] }, "examples":[], "first_known_use":{}, "history_and_etymology":{ "bushel entry 3 + man":"" }, "pronounciation":[ "-sh\u0259lm\u0259n" ], "synonym_discussion":"", "synonyms":[], "time_of_retrieval":"20220706-212142", "type":[ "noun" ] }, "busher":{ "antonyms":[], "definitions":{ ": bush leaguer":[ "who gave you a ticket to get into the game, busher" ], ": swamper":[] }, "examples":[], "first_known_use":{}, "history_and_etymology":{ "bush entry 1 + -er":"" }, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8bu\u0307sh\u0259(r)" ], "synonym_discussion":"", "synonyms":[], "time_of_retrieval":"20220707-200302", "type":[ "noun" ] }, "bushfelling":{ "antonyms":[], "definitions":{ ": the cutting of timber in bush country":[] }, "examples":[], "first_known_use":{}, "history_and_etymology":{}, "pronounciation":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "synonyms":[], "time_of_retrieval":"20220708-083035", "type":[ "noun" ] }, "bushfighter":{ "antonyms":[], "definitions":{ ": one that engages in bushfighting":[] }, "examples":[], "first_known_use":{}, "history_and_etymology":{}, "pronounciation":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "synonyms":[], "time_of_retrieval":"20220708-073657", "type":[ "noun" ] }, "bushfighting":{ "antonyms":[], "definitions":{ ": a hard skirmishing between resourceful opponents":[], ": warfare in or as if in the bush : hard fighting that involves a resourceful dodging, hiding, or moving warily and surreptitiously among trees, rocks, and undergrowth":[] }, "examples":[], "first_known_use":{}, "history_and_etymology":{}, "pronounciation":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "synonyms":[], "time_of_retrieval":"20220706-115514", "type":[ "noun" ] }, "bushwa":{ "antonyms":[], "definitions":{ ": bunkum , hooey":[ "there it was again: the bushwa , the sloganeering, being poured out to him with no regard for the truth", "\u2014 David Driscoll" ] }, "examples":[], "first_known_use":{}, "history_and_etymology":{ "probably euphemism for bullshit":"" }, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8bu\u0307sh(\u02cc)w\u00e4", "-w\u022f" ], "synonym_discussion":"", "synonyms":[], "time_of_retrieval":"20220707-101819", "type":[ "noun" ] }, "bushwalk":{ "antonyms":[], "definitions":{ ": to walk in the bush : hike":[ "\u2026 five young adventurers who rode mountain bikes, kayaked and bushwalked from Mt Kosciusko to the Victorian coast.", "\u2014 Australian Geographic , July-September 1990", "One of the pioneers in the island's national-park movement was an Austrian outdoorsman named Gustav Weindorfer, who bushwalked the mountainous interior [of Tasmania], fell in love with the sublime landscape, and never left.", "\u2014 Jamie James , Atlantic Monthly , March 2000" ] }, "examples":[], "first_known_use":{ "1876, in the meaning defined above":"" }, "history_and_etymology":{}, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8bu\u0307sh-\u02ccw\u022fk" ], "synonym_discussion":"", "synonyms":[], "time_of_retrieval":"20220707-000257", "type":[ "noun,", "verb, transitive + intransitive" ] }, "bushwhack":{ "antonyms":[], "definitions":{ ": to attack (someone) by surprise from a hidden place : ambush":[ "\u2026 the American banditti robbed trains and bushwhacked stagecoaches and settlers' caravans with equal enthusiasm for fistic violence and gunplay.", "\u2014 James Gray", "Williams wears a pistol when he goes into the countryside and worries that someone might bushwhack him because he is outspoken.", "\u2014 Monty Brower and Bill Shaw" ], ": to clear a path or advance through thick woods especially by chopping down bushes and low branches":[ "\u2026 it would allow them to locate their prey without having to bushwhack through the jungle for days or weeks.", "\u2014 Earth Island Journal" ], ": to travel by foot through uncleared terrain":[ "Other beaches have no access at all; you have to bushwhack to get to them, through terrain infested with rattlesnakes, poison oak, and other hazards.", "\u2014 Anthony Brandt", "No paths presented themselves and I bushwhacked through numerous fallen and dead trees.", "\u2014 Rob Nicholson", "\u2026 decided it was best to \" bushwhack ,\" or wander off the path to get closer to the barred owl and possibly catch a glimpse of it.", "\u2014 Eric Koszalka" ] }, "examples":[ "The group bushwhacked through the jungle.", "They used the controversy as an opportunity to bushwhack their political opponents.", "Recent Examples on the Web", "Your hands need to bushwhack , grip onto sturdy trees, and point out the soaring eagle ahead. \u2014 Danielle Bernabe, Fortune , 29 May 2021", "That means hikers are sometimes required to bushwhack to get to waypoints such as the summit of El Cajon Mountain east of Lakeside. \u2014 San Diego Union-Tribune , 20 Mar. 2021", "To get a clear picture of an emergency in progress, officers often had to bushwhack through dozens of byzantine databases and feeds from far-flung sensors, including gunshot detectors, license plate readers, and public and private security cameras. \u2014 Arthur Holland Michel, Wired , 4 Feb. 2021", "This new one will bushwhack a path into the woods and pamper your ass on a run to the mall. \u2014 David Beard, Car and Driver , 26 Oct. 2020", "Or simply study the terrain and bushwhack them along a ridge spine or other terrain funnel, without ever making a call. \u2014 Scott Bestul, Field & Stream , 8 May 2020", "Cassens and Groot were among scores of volunteer searchers who had bushwhacked for days, looking for the elderly couple. \u2014 Steve Rubenstein, SFChronicle.com , 26 Feb. 2020", "The Bruins and Leafs were tied in wins (24) and the Bolts, seemingly woke now some nine months after getting bushwhacked by the Blue Jackets in the opening round of the playoffs, had 23. \u2014 Kevin Paul Dupont, BostonGlobe.com , 5 Jan. 2020", "While bushwhacking through hellish yew thickets, the sling kept twisting and finally unscrewed the swivel stud. \u2014 John B. Snow, Outdoor Life , 14 Feb. 2020" ], "first_known_use":{ "1866, in the meaning defined at sense 1":"" }, "history_and_etymology":{ "back-formation from bushwhacker":"" }, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8bu\u0307sh-\u02cc(h)wak" ], "synonym_discussion":"", "synonyms":[ "assail", "assault", "attack", "beset", "charge", "descend (on ", "go in (on)", "jump (on)", "pounce (on ", "raid", "rush", "set on", "sic", "sick", "storm", "strike", "trash", "turn (on)" ], "time_of_retrieval":"20220707-075106", "type":[ "noun", "verb" ] }, "bushwood":{ "antonyms":[], "definitions":{}, "examples":[], "first_known_use":{}, "history_and_etymology":{}, "pronounciation":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "synonyms":[], "time_of_retrieval":"20220707-175847", "type":[ "noun" ] }, "bushy":{ "antonyms":[], "definitions":{ ": full of or overgrown with bushes":[] }, "examples":[ "an animal with a bushy tail", "Recent Examples on the Web", "Traditionally, the fish arrives at the table presented whole with its head and tail, though the puffed appearance of the center-stage fillet is said to resemble a bushy squirrel. \u2014 Los Angeles Times , 16 June 2022", "Each is uniquely otherworldly, strange characters in a fantasy play: One is bushy and lavender, another is a looming haze of robin\u2019s egg blue. \u2014 Globe Staff, BostonGlobe.com , 19 May 2022", "Now here was Draper, one year after the incident, cigar in teeth, jaw intact, nothing on his chin but the bushy red goatee. \u2014 Gene Myers, Detroit Free Press , 9 June 2022", "To avoid tick bites, the CDC recommends staying away from wooded and bushy areas with tall grass and applying insect repellant before activities like camping or gardening. \u2014 Aria Bendix, NBC News , 9 June 2022", "Pino himself, who talked to EW about executing the Mayans massive mission, how The Godfather influenced the assassination sequence, and what his wife really thought about his bushy Miguel beard. \u2014 Kristen Baldwin, EW.com , 1 June 2022", "Fans can catch up on the lightning-fast (and super cute) extraterrestrial and his bushy -two-tailed pal Tails when Sonic the Hedgehog 2 is available to stream starting tomorrow on Paramount+. \u2014 Danielle Directo-meston, The Hollywood Reporter , 23 May 2022", "Like other ancient Chinese roses, their bushy , spreading growth makes great habitat for small birds and other wildlife. \u2014 Benjamin Whitacre, Better Homes & Gardens , 12 May 2022", "On a recent outing, a guitar slinger offered a soundtrack to our orchard foray with hits from Bob Marley, the Allman Brothers and the like, setting the tone for a romp amid bushy trees heavy with fuzzy, yellow-orange fruit. \u2014 Amy Drew Thompson, Orlando Sentinel , 11 May 2022" ], "first_known_use":{ "14th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1":"" }, "history_and_etymology":{}, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8bu\u0307-sh\u0113" ], "synonym_discussion":"", "synonyms":[], "time_of_retrieval":"20220706-113103", "type":[ "adjective", "adverb", "noun" ] }, "business":{ "antonyms":[], "definitions":{ ": a bowel movement":[ "\u2014 used especially of pets" ], ": a damaging assault":[], ": a particular field of endeavor":[ "the best in the business" ], ": a usually commercial or mercantile activity engaged in as a means of livelihood : trade , line":[ "in the restaurant business" ], ": affair , matter":[ "the whole business got out of hand", "business as usual" ], ": an immediate task or objective : mission":[ "what is your business here" ], ": creation , concoction":[], ": dealings or transactions especially of an economic nature : patronage":[ "took their business elsewhere" ], ": double cross":[], ": maximum effort":[], ": movement or action (such as lighting a cigarette) by an actor intended especially to establish atmosphere , reveal character, or explain a situation":[], ": personal concern":[ "none of your business" ], ": purposeful activity : busyness":[], ": rebuke , tongue-lashing":[], ": right":[ "you have no business speaking to me that way" ], ": role , function":[ "how the human mind went about its business of learning", "\u2014 H. A. Overstreet" ], ": serious activity requiring time and effort and usually the avoidance of distractions":[ "got down to business" ] }, "examples":[ "Forever Odd is a direct sequel to 2003's Odd Thomas , the book in which we were introduced to the title character, a young man who can see the dead. They can't talk to him, but they can nudge him in the direction they want, which is usually to help them tidy up some unfinished business from when they were alive. \u2014 Charles De Lint , Fantasy & Science Fiction , May 2006", "The Sun may never set, but air temperatures can plummet to -4 degrees Fahrenheit, and blinding snowstorms appear without warning. Sunbathing here can be risky business : even huddled in our parkas and boots, the members of our expedition live under the constant threat of frostbite and hypothermia. \u2014 Terrie M. Williams , Natural History , October 2003", "Such high attrition means that most of the dot-coms here today will be gone tomorrow. The business environment is already harsh, and competition is growing. \u2014 Ann Thayer , Chemical & Engineering News , 5 June 2000", "Lancaster and Columbia have plenty of history apart from the Civil War, of course. For example, Lancaster was home to F. W. Woolworth's first successful 5&10 and Milton S. Hershey's first successful candy business . \u2014 Lancaster New Era , 2 July 1996", "The store has lost a significant amount of business since the factory closed.", "She works in the publishing business .", "David has decided to go into business with his brother.", "Their publishing company is the best in the business .", "I have to go to New York City on business next week.", "They advertised to increase business .", "He has the skills necessary to run a business .", "The town is trying to attract new businesses .", "Do we have any other business we need to discuss", "No, I didn't ask him what he wanted the car for. That's his business .", "Recent Examples on the Web", "Biberaj said her office consulted with the four business owners who were victimized, and all agreed that the restitution and sentence were fine. \u2014 Tom Jackman, Washington Post , 26 June 2022", "Netflix is in the midst of a reset, expanding its content purview and its core business model in ways that would have been unthinkable just a couple of years ago. \u2014 Alex Weprin, The Hollywood Reporter , 24 June 2022", "This medium has become a go-to source of entertainment and education for many, which is why business owners are clamoring to launch their own podcast ventures. \u2014 Rolling Stone Culture Council, Rolling Stone , 23 June 2022", "Continuing expansion of course offerings to appeal to a broader demographic is part of the future business model. \u2014 Georgann Yara, The Arizona Republic , 23 June 2022", "But Mayor Andre Dickens and interim police Chief Darin Schierbaum are asking more residents and business owners to register their surveillance systems with the city, hopeful that Atlanta\u2019s camera network will help solve and deter crime. \u2014 Shaddi Abusaid, ajc , 21 June 2022", "In the heart of Fort Greene, Brooklyn, on Sunday a scene of Black neighborhood natives, families, business owners, and pedestrians could be spotted headed toward The Lay Out in celebration of Juneteenth. \u2014 Cassandra Pintro, Vogue , 20 June 2022", "The persistent closures have government officials, residents, tourists and business owners bracing for a bummer summer in the South Bay. \u2014 John Wilkens, San Diego Union-Tribune , 18 June 2022", "Greenwood, the fintech banking platform for Black and Latino individuals and business owners, has hired Marie-Le as chief marketing officer. \u2014 Paige Mcglauflin, Fortune , 17 June 2022" ], "first_known_use":{ "14th century, in the meaning defined at sense 10":"" }, "history_and_etymology":{ "Middle English bisynesse , from bisy busy + -nesse -ness":"" }, "pronounciation":[ "-n\u0259z", "\u02c8biz-n\u0259s", "Southern also \u02c8bid-" ], "synonym_discussion":"Choose the Right Synonym for business business , commerce , trade , industry , traffic mean activity concerned with the supplying and distribution of commodities. business may be an inclusive term but specifically designates the activities of those engaged in the purchase or sale of commodities or in related financial transactions. commerce and trade imply the exchange and transportation of commodities. industry applies to the producing of commodities, especially by manufacturing or processing, usually on a large scale. traffic applies to the operation and functioning of public carriers of goods and persons. synonyms see in addition work", "synonyms":[ "custom", "patronage" ], "time_of_retrieval":"20220706-171215", "type":[ "noun" ] }, "business income":{ "antonyms":[], "definitions":{ ": the income of a business from current production as sometimes distinguished from incidental or extraneous income (as from the investments of a manufacturer)":[] }, "examples":[], "first_known_use":{}, "history_and_etymology":{}, "pronounciation":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "synonyms":[], "time_of_retrieval":"20220708-125509", "type":[ "noun" ] }, "business interruption insurance":{ "antonyms":[], "definitions":{ ": insurance against loss of net profits and continuing fixed charges during a period of total or partial suspension of business activity because of damage to described premises from specified perils":[] }, "examples":[], "first_known_use":{}, "history_and_etymology":{}, "pronounciation":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "synonyms":[], "time_of_retrieval":"20220708-120947", "type":[ "noun" ] }, "bust":{ "antonyms":[ "bang", "bash", "bat", "beat", "belt", "biff", "blow", "bop", "box", "buffet", "chop", "clap", "clip", "clout", "crack", "cuff", "dab", "douse", "fillip", "hack", "haymaker", "hit", "hook", "knock", "larrup", "lash", "lick", "pelt", "pick", "plump", "poke", "pound", "punch", "rap", "slam", "slap", "slug", "smack", "smash", "sock", "spank", "stinger", "stripe", "stroke", "swat", "swipe", "switch", "thud", "thump", "thwack", "wallop", "welt", "whack", "wham", "whop", "whap" ], "definitions":{ ": a business depression (see depression sense 2 )":[ "boom and bust" ], ": a complete failure : flop":[], ": a hearty drinking session":[ "a beer bust" ], ": a police raid (see raid entry 1 sense 2b )":[], ": a sculptured representation of the upper part of the human figure including the head and neck and usually part of the shoulders and breast":[ "has a bust of Abraham Lincoln in his office" ], ": arrest":[ "busted for carrying guns", "\u2014 Saul Gottlieb" ], ": arrest sense 1":[ "made a couple of drug busts" ], ": bankrupt , broke":[ "go bust" ], ": break down":[ "Her camera busted ." ], ": burst":[ "laughing fit to bust" ], ": demote":[ "busted them to the bottom of the seniority list", "\u2014 Time" ], ": exhaust , wear out":[ "\u2014 used in phrases like bust one's butt to describe making a strenuous effort" ], ": hit , slug":[ "felt like busting him in the face" ], ": punch , sock":[ "a good bust on the nose", "\u2014 J. T. Farrell" ], ": raid":[ "busted the apartment" ], ": spree":[], ": tame":[ "bronco busting" ], ": to bring an end to : break up":[ "helped bust trusts", "\u2014 Newsweek", "\u2014 often used with up better not try to bust up his happy marriage \u2014 Forbes" ], ": to execute or perform (a difficult, elaborate, or acrobatic movement, as when dancing)":[ "bust a dance move", "Hot Hot Heat's jittery, caffeinated rhythms and disco grooves are helping persuade punk kids to bust a move \u2026", "\u2014 Christian Hoard" ], ": to fail to complete a straight (see straight entry 4 sense 3 ) or flush":[], ": to go broke":[], ": to lose at cards by exceeding a limit (such as the count of 21 in blackjack )":[], ": to ruin financially":[ "the game of cheaters, which has busted more men than blackjack", "\u2014 Arthur Mayse" ], ": to tease or give a hard time to":[ "\u2014 often used in phrases like bust one's chops I'm just busting your chops." ] }, "examples":[ "Verb", "He busted his watch when he fell.", "I think the camera is busted .", "Police busted 12 gang members on weapons charges.", "She got busted for drug possession.", "Two students got busted by the teacher for smoking in the bathroom." ], "first_known_use":{ "1639, in the meaning defined at intransitive sense 2":"Verb", "1645, in the meaning defined at sense 1":"Noun", "1834, in the meaning defined at sense 1b":"Noun", "1836, in the meaning defined above":"Adjective" }, "history_and_etymology":{ "borrowed from French & Italian; French buste \"part of the torso above the waist,\" going back to Middle French, borrowed from Italian busto \"tree trunk\" (15th-century Upper Italian), \"part of the torso above the waist, corset, sculpture or painting representing the head and upper body,\" going back to Vulgar Latin *b\u016bstis \"trunk,\" perhaps alteration of Latin f\u016bstis \"stick, rod, cudgel\" by crossing with a Celtic word of like meaning":"Noun", "derivative of bust entry 2":"Noun", "from predicative use of bust entry 3":"Adjective", "variant of burst entry 1 with assimilatory loss of /r/ before /s/":"Verb" }, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8b\u0259st" ], "synonym_discussion":"", "synonyms":[ "break", "degrade", "demote", "disrate", "downgrade", "reduce" ], "time_of_retrieval":"20220707-102852", "type":[ "adjective", "noun", "verb" ] }, "busted":{ "antonyms":[ "bang", "bash", "bat", "beat", "belt", "biff", "blow", "bop", "box", "buffet", "chop", "clap", "clip", "clout", "crack", "cuff", "dab", "douse", "fillip", "hack", "haymaker", "hit", "hook", "knock", "larrup", "lash", "lick", "pelt", "pick", "plump", "poke", "pound", "punch", "rap", "slam", "slap", "slug", "smack", "smash", "sock", "spank", "stinger", "stripe", "stroke", "swat", "swipe", "switch", "thud", "thump", "thwack", "wallop", "welt", "whack", "wham", "whop", "whap" ], "definitions":{ ": a business depression (see depression sense 2 )":[ "boom and bust" ], ": a complete failure : flop":[], ": a hearty drinking session":[ "a beer bust" ], ": a police raid (see raid entry 1 sense 2b )":[], ": a sculptured representation of the upper part of the human figure including the head and neck and usually part of the shoulders and breast":[ "has a bust of Abraham Lincoln in his office" ], ": arrest":[ "busted for carrying guns", "\u2014 Saul Gottlieb" ], ": arrest sense 1":[ "made a couple of drug busts" ], ": bankrupt , broke":[ "go bust" ], ": break down":[ "Her camera busted ." ], ": burst":[ "laughing fit to bust" ], ": demote":[ "busted them to the bottom of the seniority list", "\u2014 Time" ], ": exhaust , wear out":[ "\u2014 used in phrases like bust one's butt to describe making a strenuous effort" ], ": hit , slug":[ "felt like busting him in the face" ], ": punch , sock":[ "a good bust on the nose", "\u2014 J. T. Farrell" ], ": raid":[ "busted the apartment" ], ": spree":[], ": tame":[ "bronco busting" ], ": to bring an end to : break up":[ "helped bust trusts", "\u2014 Newsweek", "\u2014 often used with up better not try to bust up his happy marriage \u2014 Forbes" ], ": to execute or perform (a difficult, elaborate, or acrobatic movement, as when dancing)":[ "bust a dance move", "Hot Hot Heat's jittery, caffeinated rhythms and disco grooves are helping persuade punk kids to bust a move \u2026", "\u2014 Christian Hoard" ], ": to fail to complete a straight (see straight entry 4 sense 3 ) or flush":[], ": to go broke":[], ": to lose at cards by exceeding a limit (such as the count of 21 in blackjack )":[], ": to ruin financially":[ "the game of cheaters, which has busted more men than blackjack", "\u2014 Arthur Mayse" ], ": to tease or give a hard time to":[ "\u2014 often used in phrases like bust one's chops I'm just busting your chops." ] }, "examples":[ "Verb", "He busted his watch when he fell.", "I think the camera is busted .", "Police busted 12 gang members on weapons charges.", "She got busted for drug possession.", "Two students got busted by the teacher for smoking in the bathroom." ], "first_known_use":{ "1639, in the meaning defined at intransitive sense 2":"Verb", "1645, in the meaning defined at sense 1":"Noun", "1834, in the meaning defined at sense 1b":"Noun", "1836, in the meaning defined above":"Adjective" }, "history_and_etymology":{ "borrowed from French & Italian; French buste \"part of the torso above the waist,\" going back to Middle French, borrowed from Italian busto \"tree trunk\" (15th-century Upper Italian), \"part of the torso above the waist, corset, sculpture or painting representing the head and upper body,\" going back to Vulgar Latin *b\u016bstis \"trunk,\" perhaps alteration of Latin f\u016bstis \"stick, rod, cudgel\" by crossing with a Celtic word of like meaning":"Noun", "derivative of bust entry 2":"Noun", "from predicative use of bust entry 3":"Adjective", "variant of burst entry 1 with assimilatory loss of /r/ before /s/":"Verb" }, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8b\u0259st" ], "synonym_discussion":"", "synonyms":[ "break", "degrade", "demote", "disrate", "downgrade", "reduce" ], "time_of_retrieval":"20220707-000032", "type":[ "adjective", "noun", "verb" ] }, "bustle":{ "antonyms":[ "ado", "alarums and excursions", "ballyhoo", "blather", "bluster", "bobbery", "bother", "clatter", "clutter", "coil", "commotion", "corroboree", "disturbance", "do", "foofaraw", "fun", "furor", "furore", "fuss", "helter-skelter", "hoo-ha", "hoo-hah", "hoopla", "hubble-bubble", "hubbub", "hullabaloo", "hurly", "hurly-burly", "hurricane", "hurry", "hurry-scurry", "hurry-skurry", "kerfuffle", "moil", "pandemonium", "pother", "row", "ruckus", "ruction", "rumpus", "shindy", "splore", "squall", "stew", "stir", "storm", "to-do", "tumult", "turmoil", "uproar", "welter", "whirl", "williwaw", "zoo" ], "definitions":{ ": noisy, energetic, and often obtrusive activity":[ "the hustle and bustle of the big city" ], ": to be busily astir : teem":[ "The house was bustling with activity." ], ": to move briskly and often ostentatiously":[ "bustled around the kitchen" ] }, "examples":[ "Verb", "She bustled around the kitchen getting ready for dinner guests.", "on Saturdays the city's downtown bustles with activity as a farmers' market sets up shop" ], "first_known_use":{ "1548, in the meaning defined at sense 1":"Verb", "1637, in the meaning defined above":"Noun", "1782, in the meaning defined above":"Noun" }, "history_and_etymology":{ "origin unknown":"Noun", "probably alteration of obsolete buskle to prepare, frequentative of busk , from Old Norse b\u016bask to prepare oneself":"Verb and Noun" }, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8b\u0259-s\u0259l" ], "synonym_discussion":"", "synonyms":[ "abound", "brim", "bristle", "bulge", "burst", "buzz", "crawl", "hum", "overflow", "pullulate", "swarm", "teem" ], "time_of_retrieval":"20220707-001218", "type":[ "noun", "verb" ] }, "bustling":{ "antonyms":[ "idle", "inactive", "unbusy", "unemployed", "unoccupied" ], "definitions":{ ": full of lively activity : busily astir":[ "a bustling market", "bustling streets", "Commercial ships and recreational boats were serviced by a bustling marine industry.", "\u2014 AAG Abstracts" ] }, "examples":[ "Recent Examples on the Web", "Dona Gra\u00e7a is the perfect launchpad for visits to the bustling Bairro Alto and Baixa neighborhoods, a short 15 minutes away, balanced with some sun soaked R&R in the aromatic orange garden which features a swimming pool and lounge areas. \u2014 Monica Mendal, Vogue , 24 June 2022", "Davies\u2019s game begins with an image of a bustling urban street, with red dust spilling out from the sidewalks onto the pavement. \u2014 Max Norman, The New Yorker , 24 June 2022", "Mark Williams walked into a gym tucked beside the bustling Interstate 95 in the Overtown neighborhood of Miami on a recent Thursday. \u2014 New York Times , 20 June 2022", "At the alpine lodge, owner Larry Yung's bustling summer season just grounded to a halt after Yellowstone National Park was forced to close due to dangerous flooding. \u2014 Analisa Novak, CBS News , 17 June 2022", "The bustling college district gives way to a downtown of brick facades characteristic of Old West towns established in the mid-1800s. \u2014 Leah Sottile, Rolling Stone , 16 June 2022", "While Windsor is popular tourist destination, the private estates are extensive in comparison to Kensington Palace which is has smaller private grounds amidst a bustling central London tourist hotspot. \u2014 Victoria Murphy, Town & Country , 16 June 2022", "Cities like San Marcos, Kyle and Buda along the bustling I-35 corridor were an attractive option for many people who worked in the fast-growing metropolitan areas of Austin and San Antonio. \u2014 Annie Blanks, San Antonio Express-News , 13 June 2022", "Police are looking for a third person in connection with the weekend mass shooting in Philadelphia that left three people dead and 12 others injured in the bustling South Street entertainment district. \u2014 Marlene Lenthang, NBC News , 8 June 2022" ], "first_known_use":{ "1582, in the meaning defined above":"" }, "history_and_etymology":{}, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8b\u0259-s\u0259-", "\u02c8b\u0259s-li\u014b" ], "synonym_discussion":"", "synonyms":[ "active", "assiduous", "busy", "diligent", "employed", "engaged", "hopping", "industrious", "laborious", "occupied", "sedulous", "tied-up", "working" ], "time_of_retrieval":"20220706-204050", "type":[ "adjective", "adverb" ] }, "busy":{ "antonyms":[ "absorb", "bemuse", "catch up", "engage", "engross", "enthrall", "enthral", "enwrap", "fascinate", "grip", "immerse", "interest", "intrigue", "involve", "occupy" ], "definitions":{ ": being in use":[ "found the telephone busy" ], ": bustle":[ "small boats busied to and fro", "\u2014 Quentin Crewe" ], ": engaged in action : occupied":[ "She's busy studying.", "has enough work to keep him busy for a while" ], ": foolishly or intrusively active : meddling":[ "a busy , fussy sort of man much concerned with regulating everything", "\u2014 A. M. Young" ], ": full of activity : bustling":[ "a busy seaport" ], ": full of distracting detail":[ "a busy design" ], ": to make engaged in action : to make busy (see busy entry 1 sense 1a ) : occupy":[ "busied herself about the room" ] }, "examples":[ "Adjective", "She's busy preparing for her test.", "Are you busy ", "I will be busy cleaning the house.", "I'm sorry I haven't called. I've been so busy .", "busy people who don't have time to cook", "I got enough work to keep me busy for a while.", "He is a very busy person.", "He's been busy in the kitchen all afternoon.", "My week has been so busy !", "Is there any time in your busy schedule for us to have lunch next week", "Verb", "the video game busied the child for hours", "Recent Examples on the Web: Adjective", "In the meantime, however, being a mom to North, Psalm, Chicago, and Saint has kept her plenty busy . \u2014 Christian Allaire, Vogue , 21 June 2022", "While keeping him busy at home, the situation at parliament is not expected to destabilize Macron's international agenda. \u2014 Sylvie Corbet, ajc , 21 June 2022", "Buckingham kept Tuggle extremely busy over the last 15 years with both solo work and the Buckingham McVie offshoot band. \u2014 Andy Greene, Rolling Stone , 20 June 2022", "The rest of the game saw Kalamazoo Christian keeping Shrine goalkeeper Elena Gallagher busy , but the Comets couldn't break through. \u2014 Chandler Engelbrecht, Detroit Free Press , 17 June 2022", "The confounding economic picture has investors selling stocks and bonds all at once, keeping Wall Street\u2019s trading floors busy . \u2014 David Benoit, WSJ , 16 June 2022", "Oregon\u2019s war on drugs may be over, but other crimes are on the rise and keeping police busy . \u2014 Dan Springer, Fox News , 16 June 2022", "Miller also kept busy this time writing a solo album and his second children's book. \u2014 Steve Baltin, Forbes , 4 June 2022", "The landmark birthday happened to coincide with Queen Elizabeth's Platinum Jubilee, which means everyone was kept pretty busy . \u2014 Aim\u00e9e Lutkin, ELLE , 4 June 2022", "Recent Examples on the Web: Verb", "Wedding planning isn't the only thing keeping the Olympic gold medalist busy these days. \u2014 Jasmine Washington, Seventeen , 20 Apr. 2022", "In the old days\u2014the \u201990s\u2014the affluent but creatively stifled would busy themselves DJing behind a turntable. \u2014 Marisa Meltzer, Town & Country , 31 Mar. 2022", "The challenge of transferring patients from rural communities to outlying hospitals, and from those hospitals to busy Anchorage facilities, was a factor in the decision. \u2014 Zaz Hollander, Anchorage Daily News , 4 Oct. 2021", "One fear is that those who have the resources to help effect action on climate change will instead busy themselves with building their own escape pods. \u2014 Anna Russel, The New Yorker , 3 Aug. 2021", "One fear is that those who have the resources to help effect action on climate change will instead busy themselves with building their own escape pods. \u2014 Anna Russel, The New Yorker , 3 Aug. 2021", "The cabin is too secluded to wander off-property, so guests busy themselves with activities. \u2014 Ashlea Halpern, Cond\u00e9 Nast Traveler , 18 Sep. 2021", "One fear is that those who have the resources to help effect action on climate change will instead busy themselves with building their own escape pods. \u2014 Anna Russel, The New Yorker , 3 Aug. 2021", "One fear is that those who have the resources to help effect action on climate change will instead busy themselves with building their own escape pods. \u2014 Anna Russel, The New Yorker , 3 Aug. 2021" ], "first_known_use":{ "before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1a":"Adjective", "before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at transitive sense":"Verb" }, "history_and_etymology":{ "Middle English bisy , from Old English bisig ; akin to Middle Dutch & Middle Low German besich busy":"Adjective and Verb" }, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8bi-z\u0113" ], "synonym_discussion":"Choose the Right Synonym for busy Adjective busy , industrious , diligent , assiduous , sedulous mean actively engaged or occupied. busy chiefly stresses activity as opposed to idleness or leisure. too busy to spend time with the children industrious implies characteristic or habitual devotion to work. industrious employees diligent suggests earnest application to some specific object or pursuit. very diligent in her pursuit of a degree assiduous stresses careful and unremitting application. assiduous practice sedulous implies painstaking and persevering application. a sedulous investigation of the murder", "synonyms":[ "active", "assiduous", "bustling", "diligent", "employed", "engaged", "hopping", "industrious", "laborious", "occupied", "sedulous", "tied-up", "working" ], "time_of_retrieval":"20220707-071956", "type":[ "adjective", "adverb", "verb" ] }, "bush cow":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": the short-horned buffalo of West Africa which is sometimes regarded as a separate species ( Syncerus nanus )":[], ": tapir":[] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{}, "time_of_retrieval":"20220708-184337" }, "bushtit":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{}, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8bu\u0307sh-\u02cctit" ], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[ "Recent Examples on the Web", "Finches, jays, and bushtits round out the usual clientele, and warblers and tanagers pop in for cameos. \u2014 Murr Brewster, The Christian Science Monitor , 13 Sep. 2017", "Your darling and persistent visitors are bushtits , lively little songbirds that build really wonderful hanging nests. \u2014 Joan Morris, The Mercury News , 22 Mar. 2017", "Shirley, Martinez DEAR SHIRLEY: Your darling and persistent visitors are bushtits , lively little songbirds that build really wonderful hanging nests. \u2014 Joan Morris, The Mercury News , 22 Mar. 2017" ], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{ "1884, in the meaning defined above":"" }, "time_of_retrieval":"20220708-192450" }, "businessperson":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": a person and especially an executive who transacts business : a businessman or businesswoman":[] }, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8biz-n\u0259s-\u02ccp\u0259r-s\u1d4an", "-n\u0259z-" ], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[ "Recent Examples on the Web", "The visiting businessperson feels pressure to come back with a deal and the Japanese feel this first meeting is the start of many more before an agreement is possible. \u2014 Greg Story, Forbes , 4 May 2022", "Analytics consultant/ businessperson Brian Nash, a Democrat, and state Assemblymember Kelly Seyarto, a Republican, are squaring off now and in a Nov. 8 general election. \u2014 San Diego Union-Tribune , 2 May 2022", "Burger King entered Russia through a joint venture with businessperson Alexander Kolobov, Investment Capital Ukraine and VTB Capital, which has been hit by U.S. sanctions as an affiliate of a major Russian bank. \u2014 NBC News , 18 Mar. 2022", "Mikhail Khodorkovsky was once the most powerful businessperson in Russia. \u2014 Jo-ann Mort, The New Republic , 31 Mar. 2022", "Gomez\u2019s profile as a businessperson is on the rise. \u2014 Fortune , 14 Dec. 2021", "Being a strong businessperson is having the confidence to take measured but necessary risks. \u2014 Yec, Forbes , 26 Jan. 2022", "Zions Bank President Scott Anderson and businessperson Gail Miller were the most generous individual donors. \u2014 Bryan Schott, The Salt Lake Tribune , 13 Jan. 2022", "People may think of you as a skilled businessperson with little interest in games, both in your professional and personal life. \u2014 Emily Simone, Allure , 29 Dec. 2021" ], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{ "1834, in the meaning defined above":"" }, "time_of_retrieval":"20220708-193522" }, "business is business":{ "type":[ "idiom" ], "definitions":{}, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{}, "time_of_retrieval":"20220708-200722" }, "bush trefoil":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": tick trefoil":[] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{}, "time_of_retrieval":"20220708-221545" }, "bushcraft":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": the skill gained by or necessary for living in bush country":[] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{}, "time_of_retrieval":"20220708-221740" }, "businesspeople":{ "type":[ "plural noun" ], "definitions":{ ": persons active in business":[] }, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8biz-n\u0259s-\u02ccp\u0113-p\u0259l", "-n\u0259z-" ], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[ "Recent Examples on the Web", "On March 3, Commerce Department officials spoke to a gathering of 300 businesspeople in Beijing about how to comply with the new restrictions. \u2014 New York Times , 16 Mar. 2022", "Long recognised as one of the Arab World\u2019s most successful businesspeople , Sheikh Abdullah was a pioneer of the retail and entertainment industry in the Kingdom \u2013 a mission which continues via the company which bears his name. \u2014 Josh Wilson, Forbes , 9 June 2022", "Some enterprising businesspeople became full-time car dealers. \u2014 Peter Valdes-dapena, CNN , 30 Apr. 2022", "Art is what makes the best businesspeople successful. \u2014 Cori Murray, Essence , 27 Apr. 2022", "Matthew Ormseth has the story of the nearly 30-year-old fire that killed 10 people in an apartment house in the Westlake neighborhood, a home for working-class immigrants, but also for gang members who sold drugs and extorted businesspeople . \u2014 James Raineystaff Writer, Los Angeles Times , 10 June 2022", "International businesses\u2014and businesspeople \u2014are also starting to leave the city for competitors like Singapore. \u2014 Nicholas Gordon, Fortune , 4 May 2022", "Seidel was among Pennsylvania Avenue businesspeople opposed to the proposal. \u2014 Washington Post , 23 Apr. 2022", "Not all of them have been tourists and businesspeople . \u2014 Elliot Gotkine, CNN , 5 Apr. 2022" ], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{ "1827, in the meaning defined above":"" }, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-015747" }, "business cycle":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": a cycle of economic activity usually consisting of recession, recovery, growth, and decline":[] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[ "Recent Examples on the Web", "Presidents are often at the mercy of uncontrollable events and the business cycle and an assessment of long-term results of a president\u2019s policies based on shorter-term marginal benefits or detriments is dicey, at best. \u2014 WSJ , 11 Jan. 2021", "However, the business cycle is still out there and investors need to have appropriately tempered expectations right now and be getting good advice... \u2014 Fortune Editors, Fortune , 25 May 2022", "In a normal business cycle , these factors would play out much slower, perhaps over the course of a decade, Modestino said. \u2014 Globe Staff, BostonGlobe.com , 15 May 2022", "Most of the time, those words are used to tell the reader that the economic process has changed from the last business cycle . \u2014 Robert Barone, Forbes , 24 Apr. 2022", "Keynesians believe that generalists in Congress can time fiscal policy and bureaucrats at the Federal Reserve can time price controls in credit markets, both to dampen the business cycle . \u2014 WSJ , 10 Apr. 2022", "Depending on its stage in the business cycle , such a small brand may not yet be profitable. \u2014 Errol Schweizer, Forbes , 31 Jan. 2022", "Nobody has a comprehensive theory of the business cycle that actually works. \u2014 Dominic Pino, National Review , 17 Feb. 2022", "Roughly two years into the pandemic, several of 2020s highfliers have seen their stock valuations under pressure while the world returned to something more closely resembling a normal business cycle . \u2014 Washington Post , 23 Jan. 2022" ], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{ "1858, in the meaning defined above":"" }, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-024948" }, "business community":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": the people involved in the upper levels of businesses":[] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{}, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-034744" }, "bush clover":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": any of several usually shrubby lespedezas":[] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[ "Recent Examples on the Web", "Working Dogs for Conservation has trained dogs to find spotted knapweed in Montana, Chinese bush clover in Iowa, yellow star thistle in Colorado, rosy wolf snails in Hawaii and brown tree snakes in Guam. \u2014 Washington Post , 24 Aug. 2019" ], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{ "circa 1818, in the meaning defined above":"" }, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-042406" }, "business class":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": a class of air transportation at a fare lower than first class and higher than coach":[] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[ "Recent Examples on the Web", "And now with a new direct business class flight from from Newark to Nice from airline La Compagnie, it's never been easier to get to the C\u00f4te d\u2019Azur. \u2014 Rooksana Hossenally, Forbes , 13 May 2022", "The Future train has four business class cars, each with 33 seats. \u2014 Maggie Hiufu Wong, CNN , 2 May 2022", "The plane also has 18 lie-flat business class seats with entertainment systems, power and USB ports and complimentary beer, wine and cocktails. \u2014 Shanti Lerner, The Arizona Republic , 29 Mar. 2022", "The flight will take place on a Boeing 787 Dreamliner and include 27 business class seats, 33 premium economy seats, 215 economy seats, and 13 economy Skycouches (three economy seats that convert into a lie-flat bed). \u2014 Alison Fox, Travel + Leisure , 22 Mar. 2022", "Just 10% of its passengers are business class ticket holders. \u2014 Quartz Staff, Quartz , 1 Nov. 2021", "For those of us who've been lucky enough to fly business class , going back to economy is hard. \u2014 Julia Buckley, CNN , 21 May 2022", "The deal also includes the option to fly business class from New York to London with a 5-night stay at the Hilton London Kensington for prices starting at just under $2,300 per person. \u2014 Meena Thiruvengadam, Travel + Leisure , 26 Jan. 2022", "However, this time the aircraft was one of British Airways' newest aircraft, the Airbus 350-1000, fitted with their latest business class product, the Club Suite. \u2014 Michele Robson, Forbes , 9 Nov. 2021" ], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{ "1962, in the meaning defined above":"" }, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-052623" }, "bush tick":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": a tick ( Haemaphysalis bispinosa ) common on cattle in Australia":[] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{}, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-062209" }, "bush up":{ "type":[ "intransitive verb" ], "definitions":{ ": hide":[] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{}, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-072845" }, "bush fruit":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": a small fruit growing on a woody bush (such as the currant and gooseberry)":[], ": a plant producing bush fruit \u2014 compare cane fruit":[] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{}, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-075725" }, "bush goat":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": bushbuck":[] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{ "translation of Afrikaans bosbok":"" }, "first_known_use":{}, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-080309" }, "bushpig":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": a wild usually reddish to black pig ( Potamochoerus porcus ) of forests and scrubland of sub-Saharan Africa and Madagascar that has much facial hair, long pointed ears, and a light-colored mane along the top of the neck and back":[] }, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8bu\u0307sh-\u02ccpig" ], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{ "1840, in the meaning defined above":"" }, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-080338" }, "bush fowl":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": megapode":[] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{}, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-081627" }, "business reply card":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{}, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{}, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-081708" }, "businessman":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{}, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8biz-n\u0259s-\u02ccman", "-m\u0259n", "-n\u0259z-" ], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[ "I know it's hard for him to sell his paintings. He's always been a better artist than businessman .", "Recent Examples on the Web", "Chinese businessman William Li launched the electric vehicle start-up NextEV in November 2014. \u2014 Grady Mcgregor, Fortune , 30 June 2022", "The Sunday Times and The Mail on Sunday reported allegations that Fawcett helped support a campaign for official honors for Saudi businessman Mahfouz Marei Mubarak bin Mahfouz. \u2014 Stephanie Petit And Simon Perry, PEOPLE.com , 29 June 2022", "Only three other statewide candidates in recent years (then- businessman Hogan and former delegate Heather Mizuer in 2014 and former senator Richard Madaleno in 2018) have used it. \u2014 Ovetta Wiggins, Washington Post , 28 June 2022", "One of Hall's most significant relationships post-Jagger, the two-year romance between the model and businessman eventually ended, reportedly because of the strain of separation (Hemsley was based in Australia). \u2014 Logan Sykes, Town & Country , 23 June 2022", "On the heels of bankruptcy, an ad businessman falls for a singer at a yoga retreat and joins her on a journey of self-realization. \u2014 Jacob Siegal, BGR , 19 June 2022", "The inventor and businessman is shown in the video celebrating the Fourth of July. \u2014 Tori B. Powell, CBS News , 17 June 2022", "British businessman Malcolm Walker started the company in 1970 as a side hustle separate from his day job at a Woolworths store, breaking up large packs of frozen burgers and fish fingers to sell them loose from a single store near the Welsh border. \u2014 Saabira Chaudhuri, WSJ , 17 June 2022", "But Laxalt still faces some competition in the primary as Sam Brown, a veteran and businessman , has been rising in the polls. \u2014 Hannah Demissie, ABC News , 14 June 2022" ], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{ "1803, in the meaning defined above":"" }, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-083109" }, "busybody":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": an officious or inquisitive person":[] }, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8bi-z\u0113-\u02ccb\u00e4-d\u0113" ], "synonyms":[ "buttinsky", "buttinski", "interferer", "interloper", "intermeddler", "intruder", "kibitzer", "kibbitzer", "meddler", "nosey parker" ], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[ "The neighborhood busybody is telling everyone that the couple up the street is getting divorced.", "that busybody across the street is always telling me how to tend to my own garden", "Recent Examples on the Web", "In the busybody work of the postwar regulatory state, trustbusting has steadily declined into one of the most consistently unproductive activities of the U.S. government. \u2014 Holman W. Jenkins, WSJ , 10 May 2022", "There isn't much that can get this busybody to do that without complaint. \u2014 Nicola Dall'asen, Allure , 7 Apr. 2022", "Her Pam is a master manipulator disguised as a chatty busybody , and an attention-seeking martyr capable of casual cruelty. \u2014 Kristen Baldwin, EW.com , 4 Mar. 2022", "For the second half of the show, the busybody conceit is largely jettisoned in favor of the guys doing an ensemble act in a place called the Funky Butt Club. \u2014 Christopher Arnott, courant.com , 3 Feb. 2022", "The evidence about the Omicron variant should be a rebuke to busybody bureaucrats determined to lock down the nation. \u2014 WSJ , 11 Jan. 2022", "She constantly gets harassed by some busybody aunt or uncle, but our parents are the worst. \u2014 Washington Post , 10 Jan. 2022", "Pharmacist by trade and busybody by nature, Splichal joined the Changing Footprints team and eventually brought it to the south side. \u2014 Justin L. Mack, The Indianapolis Star , 27 Dec. 2021", "Habte might be considered a busybody in any other context, a meddler too interested in the lives of others. \u2014 Los Angeles Times , 10 Dec. 2021" ], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{ "1526, in the meaning defined above":"" }, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-090003" }, "businesswoman":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{}, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8biz-n\u0259s-\u02ccwu\u0307-m\u0259n", "-n\u0259z-" ], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[ "Like many musicians, she's found that she has to be a businesswoman as well as a performer.", "Recent Examples on the Web", "The uneven split caused a rift between the founders, with Chanel accusing Wertheimer of exploiting her talents as a fashion designer and as a businesswoman . \u2014 Sophie Mellor, Fortune , 10 June 2022", "Safely on the ballot are Norton Shores businesswoman Tudor Dixon; Ottawa County real estate agent Ryan Kelley; Farmington Hills pastor Ralph Rebandt; Bloomfield Hills businessman Kevin Rinke, and Kalamazoo chiropractor Garrett Soldano. \u2014 Paul Egan, Detroit Free Press , 26 May 2022", "Also in the race, the DeVos family, prominent conservative donors and activists in Michigan, is endorsing businesswoman Tudor Dixon. \u2014 Ben Kamisar, NBC News , 24 May 2022", "Gregg Brelsford, an independent who used to work as the manager of the Bristol Bay Borough, also reported more than $1 million in assets, as did Anchorage businesswoman Sherry Mettler. \u2014 Nathaniel Herz, Anchorage Daily News , 18 May 2022", "The mother and daughter stumbled upon a Drybar shop during one of their travel adventures and began to discuss the possibility of opening a franchise, which resonated with Klein as a businesswoman . \u2014 Linda Gandee, cleveland , 15 Mar. 2022", "Simpson opened up to Entrepreneur earlier this month about not being taken seriously as a businesswoman . \u2014 Stephanie Wenger, PEOPLE.com , 4 Mar. 2022", "For Pace, selling goods by a diverse group of artists is a part of what motivates her as a businesswoman . \u2014 Lisa Boone, Los Angeles Times , 24 Feb. 2022", "The photos are the latest in a series of sizzling swimwear snaps from the businesswoman who recently appeared in a silver one-piece. \u2014 Leah Simpson, PEOPLE.com , 6 June 2022" ], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{ "1827, in the meaning defined above":"" }, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-091149" }, "bush forest":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": chaparral":[] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{}, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-092036" }, "bush basil":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": a sweet basil of a cultivar with small leaves":[] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{ "1597, in the meaning defined above":"" }, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-111616" }, "business machine":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": a machine (such as a computer or tabulator) designed especially to facilitate clerical operations common in business or industrial firms":[] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{}, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-132643" }, "busing":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": the act of transporting by bus":[], ": the transporting of children to a school outside their residential area as a means of achieving racial balance in that school":[] }, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8b\u0259-si\u014b" ], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[ "Recent Examples on the Web", "Over the decades that followed, JCPS whittled down its busing program, with the Black community shouldering the burden of keeping schools integrated while their local options suffered. \u2014 Olivia Krauth, The Courier-Journal , 2 June 2022", "During an April 6 press conference launching the additional efforts, Abbott did not explain that the busing is voluntary for immigrants. \u2014 ProPublica , 30 Apr. 2022", "The busing was the most pointed of a slew of measures announced Wednesday. \u2014 Washington Post , 7 Apr. 2022", "Twin Courier Journal investigations into busing and magnet schools agreed, showing JCPS has routinely failed to do right by some of its most disenfranchised students and communities. \u2014 Olivia Krauth, The Courier-Journal , 27 May 2022", "Abbott, a Republican, decided to create the busing operation following news that Biden was going to end Title 42, a Trump-era public health order that allowed authorities to turn away migrants at the border. \u2014 Fox News , 13 May 2022", "The busing and unsafe vehicle policies will be added to Operation Lone Star, and Abbott said more directives will be announced next week. \u2014 Amir Vera And Amy Simonson, CNN , 6 Apr. 2022", "Critics have questioned the legality of the migrant busing , but Abbott claims the program is lawful since riders take the buses voluntarily and the trip is free of charge. \u2014 Nicholas Reimann, Forbes , 13 Apr. 2022", "Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton told Fox News that the nuances of the busing plan will be more apparent once President Biden rescinds Title 42 next month. \u2014 Fox News , 11 Apr. 2022" ], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{ "1920, in the meaning defined at sense 1":"" }, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-133103" }, "bushbuck":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": a small African striped antelope ( Tragelaphus scriptus ) especially of sub-Saharan forests that has spirally twisted horns in the male":[] }, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8bu\u0307sh-\u02ccb\u0259k" ], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[ "Recent Examples on the Web", "Federal officials said inspectors identified the skins were from bushbucks , a species of antelope in sub-Saharan Africa, and from genets and civets, small catlike mammals. \u2014 Washington Post , 11 Oct. 2019", "In Gorongosa, the dogs target bushbuck , impala and waterbuck, surrounding the prey, grabbing at legs, nose and hindquarters, disemboweling it from below. \u2014 Natalie Angier, New York Times , 3 Aug. 2019", "There are also buffalo and small antelope like puku and bushbuck . \u2014 Martin Edstrom, National Geographic , 16 June 2017" ], "history_and_etymology":{ "translation of Afrikaans bosbok":"" }, "first_known_use":{ "1827, in the meaning defined above":"" }, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-135037" }, "busy bee":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": one who is very busy and active":[ "My mom is a real busy bee around Christmastime." ] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{}, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-151210" }, "busker":{ "type":[ "intransitive verb", "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": a person who entertains in a public place for donations":[] }, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8b\u0259-sk\u0259r" ], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[ "Recent Examples on the Web", "My affinity for this special place goes back to childhood when my great uncle was a semi-famous busker strumming his Gibson guitar on various street corners. \u2014 Leslie Kelly, Forbes , 24 Apr. 2022", "By the mid-2000s, Alynda Lee had settled in New Orleans, becoming part of its DIY busker scene and gigging with a rotating crew of young musicians who\u2019d congregated in the city post-Katrina. \u2014 Jonathan Bernstein, Rolling Stone , 13 Jan. 2022", "Before that, Claudi, an avid busker , was a fixture at the Delancey Street subway station on the Lower East Side. \u2014 New York Times , 16 Dec. 2021", "Ahead of the rose ceremony, Michelle and Rick, 32, strolled around the block and stopped to dance by a busker playing piano. \u2014 Dana Rose Falcone, PEOPLE.com , 16 Nov. 2021", "At the Conservatory Garden, a bride and her groom were posing for photographs on one black bench, while a busker napped on another. \u2014 Jonathan Lee, New York Times , 12 Oct. 2021", "Sections of Sonoma County received about two-hundredths of an inch of rainfall Thursday afternoon, and in Oakland, near Lake Merritt, the rain was enough to halt a busker \u2019s performance and send his audience scattering. \u2014 Andres Picon, San Francisco Chronicle , 9 Sep. 2021", "In the film\u2019s closing shot, Sharad and his family are traveling by train as a young busker , singing traditional songs, moves through the compartment. \u2014 Peter Rainer, The Christian Science Monitor , 13 May 2021", "In a banking hub full of office workers, Mr. Kwok, who died last month at 68, was a rare figure: a full-time busker with a rockabilly pompadour. \u2014 New York Times , 15 Jan. 2021" ], "history_and_etymology":{ "busk , probably from Italian buscare to procure, gain, from Spanish buscar to look for":"" }, "first_known_use":{ "1851, in the meaning defined above":"" }, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-161327" }, "business casual":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": a style of dressing for white-collar employees that is less formal than traditional business attire":[ "I sat at my desk the other afternoon, dressed in business casual , and wistfully fingered my most recent pay stub. \u2026 And I thought as I've thought before: perhaps it's no coincidence that business casual is sweeping the country just as white-collar job security evaporates.", "\u2014 Jay Weiser , New Republic , 26 Feb. 1996" ] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{ "1968, in the meaning defined above":"" }, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-172643" }, "bush fly":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": any of several small flies related to the housefly that are often extremely abundant in pastoral parts of Australia and that swarm over cattle and other animals":[] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{}, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-180415" }, "bush cinquefoil":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": a much-branched shrub ( Potentilla fruticosa ) with compound leaves and yellow flowers common through the north temperate zone often as a weed":[] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{}, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-181709" }, "bush poppy":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": a California evergreen shrub ( Dendromecon rigida ) of the family Papaveraceae with yellowish green foliage often cultivated for its long-stalked golden-yellow flowers":[] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{}, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-185735" }, "business day":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": a day when most businesses are open : a weekday that is not a holiday":[ "Please allow 14 business days for delivery." ] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{}, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-185938" }, "bushfire":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": an uncontrolled fire in a bush area":[] }, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8bu\u0307sh-\u02ccf\u012b(-\u0259)r" ], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[ "Recent Examples on the Web", "Last month, a large bushfire near the region's Margaret River destroyed more than 6,000 hectares (14,826 acres) of land, forcing evacuations, according to BBC News. \u2014 Caitlin O'kane, CBS News , 13 Jan. 2022", "His entry showed a bird\u2019s eye view image taken by a drone of a line of bushfire ripping through a wildlife reserve in Queensland. \u2014 NBC News , 1 Dec. 2021", "Smoke from Australia\u2019s 2019\u20132020 bushfire season littered the Southern Ocean with iron, nourishing an unprecedented algal bloom more expansive than Australia itself. \u2014 Nikk Ogasa, Scientific American , 19 Nov. 2021", "The awful bushfire season of 2019\u201320 in Australia, for instance, produced 38 of these plumes over the course of just a few days. \u2014 Matt Simon, Wired , 27 July 2021", "The overall winner was taken by photographer Jo-Anne McArthur, who encountered a female eastern grey kangaroo (below), with a joey in her pouch, that somehow had survived a devastating bushfire near Australia\u2019s southeast coast. \u2014 Cecilia Rodriguez, Forbes , 1 June 2021", "Australia's bushfire season is only expected to worsen in lockstep with global heating. \u2014 Zahra Barnes, SELF , 22 Apr. 2021", "In Australia, a bushfire has been burning out of control for six weeks now in the popular tourist spot of Fraser Island as parts of the country swelter through a record-breaking heatwave. \u2014 Emma Reynolds, CNN , 7 Dec. 2020", "The blaze was the first significant bushfire so far in Australia\u2019s annual fire season, the ferocity of which scientists say is becoming increasingly difficult to predict. \u2014 New York Times , 22 Dec. 2020" ], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{ "1832, in the meaning defined above":"" }, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-190114" }, "business card":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": a small card bearing information (such as name and address) about a business or business representative":[] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[ "Recent Examples on the Web", "On June 8, 2021, about a month after Barnes sent the email regarding Logan\u2019s business card , state officials replaced the server in Coffee County with a new server, according to computer records generated when the new server was installed. \u2014 Emma Brown And Amy Gardner, Anchorage Daily News , 13 May 2022", "On June 8, 2021, about a month after Barnes sent the email regarding Logan\u2019s business card , state officials replaced the server in Coffee County with a new server, according to computer records generated when the new server was installed. \u2014 Amy Gardner, Washington Post , 13 May 2022", "Instead of asking customers to switch to another business card , Fyle integrates with their existing business credit cards to give them a real-time spend management experience. \u2014 Bill Hardekopf, Forbes , 21 Apr. 2022", "After every significant encounter with residents, officers in Warrenton are required to hand out a QR code, which is on the back of their business card , asking for feedback on the interaction. \u2014 Emily Davies, BostonGlobe.com , 2 June 2022", "After every significant encounter with residents, officers in Warrenton are required to hand out a QR code, which is on the back of their business card , asking for feedback on the interaction. \u2014 Emily Davies, Washington Post , 2 June 2022", "If nothing else, the book contains a business card for Best Quality Vacuum, which Saul will eventually use to contact Ed and become Gene from Cinnabon. \u2014 Alan Sepinwall, Rolling Stone , 17 May 2022", "On March 23, 2018, Dana called Child Protective Services, who sent a caseworker to the Hart's split-level home, leaving a business card in the door. \u2014 Kc Baker, PEOPLE.com , 26 Mar. 2022", "Three weeks later, a Palo Alto police detective came to Muller\u2019s apartment and left a business card with his wife. \u2014 Longreads , 5 May 2022" ], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{ "1821, in the meaning defined above":"" }, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-191751" }, "businessman's risk":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": an investment (such as a stock) with a moderately high risk factor that is bought with an eye to growth potential and capital gains or sometimes tax advantages rather than for income":[] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{ "1936, in the meaning defined above":"" }, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-202851" }, "business life insurance":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": insurance on the life of a member of a partnership or upon an officer or stockholder in a corporation payable so as to finance purchase by surviving owners of the insured's interest after the insured dies":[], ": insurance on the life of a sole proprietor payable so as to finance the purchase of the business by an outside interest at the owner's death":[], ": insurance on the life of a key employee for the benefit of a business concern":[] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{}, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-202931" }, "bush baby":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": any of several small nocturnal arboreal African primates ( Galago and related genera of the family Lorisidae) with large eyes, long ears, a long tail, and elongated hind limbs that enable them to leap with great agility":[] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[ "Recent Examples on the Web", "In Florida, 22 animals had been tested as of early this month, including three wild dolphins, two civets, two clouded leopards, a gorilla, an orangutan, an alpaca and a bush baby , state officials said. \u2014 Jonel Aleccia, CNN , 30 Oct. 2020", "Romance Was Born, with its waratarah florals and bush baby dresses, was especially missed on this front. \u2014 Steff Yotka, Vogue , 21 May 2019", "The man blew the coal into flame, built a fire, and laid the bush baby and the squirrels on top of it. \u2014 WSJ , 9 Oct. 2018", "When the bush baby was medium-rare, the cook tore off one of its arms and handed it to me. \u2014 WSJ , 9 Oct. 2018", "His further research determined that nature's best continuous jumper is the galago, or bush baby , a nocturnal primate native to Africa. \u2014 Erin Biba, Scientific American , 1 May 2017", "The team recorded calls of several bush babies at three forest sites in western Angola, then compared the recordings with teeth and jaws from museum specimens. \u2014 Elena Bersacola, National Geographic , 1 Mar. 2017" ], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{ "1901, in the meaning defined above":"" }, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-210421" }, "business car":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": a private railroad car usually equipped with office and living accommodations for the use of railway officials while traveling":[] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{}, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-214318" }, "Bush":{ "type":[ "adjective", "biographical name", "noun", "verb" ], "definitions":{ ": a close thicket of shrubs suggesting a single plant":[], ": a large uncleared or sparsely settled area (as in Australia) usually scrub-covered or forested : wilderness":[ "\u2014 usually used with the" ], ": a bunch of ivy formerly hung outside a tavern to indicate wine for sale":[], ": tavern":[], ": advertising":[ "good wine needs no bush", "\u2014 William Shakespeare" ], ": minor league":[ "\u2014 usually used in plural spent ten years in the bushes" ], "George (Herbert Walker) 1924\u20132018 American politician; vice president of the U.S. (1981\u201389); 41st president of the U.S. (1989\u201393)":[], ": to support, mark, or protect with bushes":[], ": to extend like a bush : resemble a bush":[], "George W(alker) 1946\u2013 son of George H. W. Bush American politician; 43rd president of the U.S. (2001\u201309)":[], ": having a low-growing compact bushy habit":[ "\u2014 used especially of cultivated beans bush snap beans" ], ": serving, occurring in, or used in the bush":[ "bush planes" ], "1890\u20131974 American electrical engineer":[ "Van*ne*var \\ v\u0259-\u200b\u02c8n\u0113-\u200bv\u0259r \\" ], ": bushing":[], ": falling below acceptable standards : unprofessional":[ "bush behavior" ] }, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8bu\u0307sh" ], "synonyms":[ "backcountry", "backland(s)", "backwater", "backwoods", "frontier", "hinterland", "outback", "outlands", "up-country" ], "antonyms":[ "bad", "bastard", "bush-league", "crummy", "crumby", "deficient", "dissatisfactory", "ill", "inferior", "lame", "lousy", "off", "paltry", "poor", "punk", "sour", "suboptimal", "subpar", "substandard", "unacceptable", "unsatisfactory", "wack", "wanting", "wretched", "wrong" ], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{ "Middle English bussh, bosch, buissh \"woods, thicket, underbrush, shrub, underbrush concealing a hunter or fighter,\" going back to Old English *busc, going back to Germanic *buska- (perhaps also beside an earlier u-stem *busku- ) (whence also Old Saxon -busc in br\u0101malbusk \"bramble bush,\" Middle Dutch bosch, busch \"forest, bunch, bundle,\" Old High German busc, bosc \"shrub, bramble bush, thicket, grove,\" Old Swedish buske \"bush,\" Old Norse [Norway] busk\u00e6r, a nickname, probably \"the bushy-haired one,\" Old Icelandic Buski, name for a dog, probably \"the bristly one\"), of uncertain origin; (sense 2) probably after Dutch bosch in this sense":"Noun", "derivative of bush entry 1":"Verb", "from attributive use of bush entry 1":"Adjective", "Dutch bus bushing, box, from Middle Dutch busse box, from Late Latin buxis \u2014 more at box entry 1":"Noun", "short for bush-league":"Adjective" }, "first_known_use":{ "14th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1a":"Noun", "15th century, in the meaning defined at transitive sense":"Verb", "1595, in the meaning defined at sense 1":"Adjective", "1566, in the meaning defined above":"Noun", "1959, in the meaning defined above":"Adjective" }, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-225948" }, "busman's holiday":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": a holiday spent in following or observing the practice of one's usual occupation":[] }, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8b\u0259s-m\u0259nz-" ], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[ "Recent Examples on the Web", "More like a busman's holiday : a tour of duty rather than a scenic tour. \u2014 James Harbeck, The Week , 5 Mar. 2022" ], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{ "1893, in the meaning defined above":"" }, "time_of_retrieval":"20220709-235130" }, "business pass":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": a pass in bridge to avoid interfering with a partner's double":[] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{}, "time_of_retrieval":"20220710-005348" }, "bush grape":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": sand grape":[], ": a shrubby wild grape ( Vitis acerifolia ) of the southern U.S. having leaves permanently pilose beneath and fruit with persistent heavy bloom":[] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{}, "time_of_retrieval":"20220710-010811" }, "business as usual":{ "type":[ "idiom" ], "definitions":{}, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{}, "time_of_retrieval":"20220710-012917" }, "bush honeysuckle":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": any of several shrubby honeysuckles of the genus Lonicera (especially L. tatarica )":[] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{}, "time_of_retrieval":"20220710-013515" }, "busman":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": an operator of a bus":[] }, "pronounciation":[ "\u02c8b\u0259s-m\u0259n", "-\u02ccman" ], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{}, "time_of_retrieval":"20220710-015427" }, "bushhog":{ "type":[ "verb" ], "definitions":{ ": to clear land of trees and brush":[], ": to clear of trees and brush":[] }, "pronounciation":[ "-\u00e4g" ], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{ "from Bush Hog , proprietary name for a rotary cutter towed by a tractor":"" }, "first_known_use":{ "1958, in the meaning defined above":"" }, "time_of_retrieval":"20220710-020109" }, "bush shirt":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": a usually loose-fitting cotton shirt with patch pockets":[] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{ "from its use in rough country":"" }, "first_known_use":{ "1901, in the meaning defined above":"" }, "time_of_retrieval":"20220710-024124" }, "bushboy":{ "type":[ "noun" ], "definitions":{ ": bushman sense 3":[] }, "pronounciation":[], "synonyms":[], "antonyms":[], "synonym_discussion":"", "examples":[], "history_and_etymology":{}, "first_known_use":{}, "time_of_retrieval":"20220710-025115" } }