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bushbaby bush baby

any of several agile long-tailed nocturnal African lemurlike primates of the genus Galago with dense woolly fur and large eyes and ears; -- called also galago.

bushbuck

antelope with white harnesslike markings and twisted horns.

bushed

very tired from exertion.

Bushel

To mend or repair, as men's garments; to repair garments.

Bushelage

A duty payable on commodities by the bushel.

Bushelman

A tailor's assistant for repairing garments; -- called also busheler.

Bushfighting

Fighting in the bush, or from behind bushes, trees, or thickets.

Bushhammer

To dress with bushhammer; as, to bushhammer a block of granite.

Bushido

The unwritten code of moral principles regulating the actions of the Japanese knighthood, or Samurai; the chivalry of Japan.

Bushiness

The condition or quality of being bushy.

Bushing

The operation of fitting bushes, or linings, into holes or places where wear is to be received, or friction diminished, as pivot holes, etc.

Bushman

A woodsman; a settler in the bush.

Bushranger

One who roams, or hides, among the bushes; especially, in Australia, an escaped criminal living in the bush.

bushwhack

to live in the bush as a fugitive or as a guerilla.

Bushwhacker

One accustomed to beat about, or travel through, bushes.

Bushwhacking

Traveling, or working a way, through bushes; pulling by the bushes, as in hauling a boat along the bushy margin of a stream.

Bushy

Thick and spreading, like a bush.

Business

That which busies one, or that which engages the time, attention, or labor of any one, as his principal concern or interest, whether for a longer or shorter time; constant employment; regular occupation; as, the business of life; business before pleasure.

Businesslike

In the manner of one transacting business wisely and by right methods; practical and efficient.

Businessman

a person employed in a business at a managerial level, especially an executive or proprietor.

Busk

To prepare; to make ready; to array; to dress.

busker

a person who entertains people for money in public places (as by singing or dancing).

Busket

A small bush; also, a sprig or bouquet.

Buskin

A strong, protecting covering for the foot, coming some distance up the leg.

Busky

See Bosky, and 1st Bush, n.

Buss

A small strong vessel with two masts and two cabins; -- used in the herring fishery.

bust

To break or burst.

bust-up

a serious quarrel (especially one that ends a friendship).

busted

Inoperable due to damage; broken; -- of a machine; as, the coke machine is busted.

Buster

Something huge; a roistering blade; also, a spree.

Bustle

A kind of pad or cushion worn on the back below the waist, by women, to give fullness to the skirts; -- called also bishop, and tournure.

Bustling

Agitated; noisy; tumultuous; characterized by confused activity; as, a bustling crowd.

Busy

To make or keep busy; to employ; to engage or keep engaged; to occupy; as, to busy one's self with books.

busybodied

intruding unasked into the affairs of others.

Busybody

One who officiously concerns himself with the affairs of others; a meddling person.

busyness

the state of being or appearing to be actively engaged in an activity; as, they manifested all the busyness of a pack of beavers.

busywork

active work of little value, performed merely to occupy time, avoid boredom, or to look busy; as, while he was waiting he filled the days with busywork.

But

See Butt, v., and Abut, v.

But Butt

A limit; a bound; a goal; the extreme bound; the end.

But-thorn

The common European starfish (Asterias rubens).

butacaine

a white crystalline ester (C18H30N2O2) that is applied to mucous membranes as a topical anesthetic. Chemically it is 3-(di-n-butylamino)-1-propanol 4-aminobenzoate (H2N.C6H4.CO.O.(CH2)3N(C4H9)2). It is usually used as the sulfate salt.

butadiene

a gaseous hydrocarbon C4H6; -- it is used as a monomer unit in making synthetic rubbers.

Butane

An inflammable gaseous saturated hydrocarbon, C4H10, of the marsh gas, or paraffin, series.

butanol

a flammable alcohol (C4H9.OH) derived from butane and used as a solvent.

butch

a lesbian who is noticeably masculine.

Butcher

To kill or slaughter (animals) for food, or for market; as, to butcher hogs.

Butcherly

Like a butcher; without compunction; savage; bloody; inhuman; fell.

Butea

a genus of East Indian trees or shrubs: dhak.

butene

any of three isomeric singly unsaturated hydrocarbons C4H8; all are used in making synthetic rubbers; -- called also butylene.

Buteo

a genus of broad-winged soaring hawks.

Butler

An officer in a king's or a nobleman's household, whose principal business it is to take charge of the liquors, plate, etc.; the head servant in a large house.

Butlerage

A duty of two shillings on every tun of wine imported into England by merchant strangers; -- so called because paid to the king's butler for the king.

Butment

A buttress of an arch; the supporter, or that part which joins it to the upright pier.

Butt

The common English flounder.

Butte

A detached low mountain, or high rising abruptly from the general level of the surrounding plain; -- applied to peculiar elevations in the Rocky Mountain region.

Butter

One who, or that which, butts.

butter-and-eggs Butter and eggs

a name given to several perennial plants having showy flowers of two shades of yellow, or of yellow and orange, such as Narcissus incomparabilis in Europe, and the toadflax (Linaria vulgaris) in the United States; the latter is a naturalized weed in North America.

butter-print

tall annual herb or subshrub of tropical Asia having velvety leaves and yellow flowers and yielding a strong fiber; naturalized in SE Europe and US.

Butter-scotch

A kind of candy, mainly composed of sugar and butter.

Butterbird

The rice bunting or bobolink; -- so called in the island of Jamaica.

Butterbur

A broad-leaved plant (Petasites vulgaris) of the Composite family, said to have been used in England for wrapping up pats of butter.

Buttercup

A plant of the genus Ranunculus, or crowfoot, particularly Ranunculus bulbosus, with bright yellow flowers; -- called also butterflower, golden cup, and kingcup. It is the cuckoobud of Shakespeare.

butterfat

the fatty substance of milk from which butter is made.

butterfingers

someone who drops things (especially one who cannot catch a ball); a person who is butter-fingered.

Butterfish

A name given to several different fishes, in allusion to their slippery coating of mucus, as the Stromateus triacanthus of the Atlantic coast, the Epinephelus punctatus of the southern coast, the rock eel, and the kelpfish of New Zealand.

Butterfly

A general name for the numerous species of diurnal Lepidoptera.

butterflyfish

tropical gurnardlike fish with huge fanlike pectoral fins for underwater gliding; unrelated to searobins.

Butterine

A substance prepared from animal fat with some other ingredients intermixed, as an imitation of butter.

Butteris

A steel cutting instrument, with a long bent shank set in a handle which rests against the shoulder of the operator. It is operated by a thrust movement, and used in paring the hoofs of horses.

Buttermilk

The milk that remains after the butter is separated from the cream.

Butternut

An American tree (Juglans cinerea) of the Walnut family, and its edible fruit; -- so called from the oil contained in the latter. Sometimes called oil nut and white walnut.

Butterweed

An annual composite plant of the Mississippi valley (Senecio lobatus).

Butterwort

A genus of low herbs (Pinguicula) having simple leaves which secrete from their glandular upper surface a viscid fluid, to which insects adhere, after which the margin infolds and the insects are digested by the plant. The species are found mostly in the North Temperate zone.

Buttery

An apartment in a house where butter, milk and other provisions are kept.

Buttock

The part at the back of the hip, which, in man, forms one of the rounded protuberances on which he sits; the rump. Often used in the plural -- see buttocks.

buttocks

the fleshy part of the human body at the back of the hip, on which a person sits.

Button

To be fastened by a button or buttons; as, the coat will not button.

Buttonbush

A shrub (Cephalanthus occidentalis) growing by the waterside; -- so called from its globular head of flowers. See Capitulum.

buttoned

furnished with buttons or something buttonlike. Opposite of unbuttoned.

buttoned-down

conservatively formal and businesslike in dress and manner.

Buttonhole

To hold at the button or buttonhole; to detain in conversation to weariness; to bore; as, he buttonholed me a quarter of an hour.

Buttonmold

A disk of bone, wood, or other material, which is made into a button by covering it with cloth.

Buttons

A boy servant, or page, -- in allusion to the buttons on his livery.

Buttonweed

The name of several plants of the genera Spermacoce and Diodia, of the Madder family.

Buttonwood

The Platanus occidentalis, or American plane tree, a large tree, producing rough balls, from which it is named; -- called also buttonball tree, and, in some parts of the United States, sycamore. The California buttonwood is Platanus racemosa.

Buttony

Ornamented with a large number of buttons.

Buttress

To support with a buttress; to prop; to brace firmly.

Butty

One who mines by contract, at so much per ton of coal or ore.

Butyl

A compound radical, regarded as butane, less one atom of hydrogen.

butyl mercaptan

A volatile liquid, C4H9.SH, having a strong odor like that of a skunk; also called butanethiol. All three isomers, normal, sec-, and tert-butanethiol possess the skunk odor.

Butylamine

A colorless liquid base, C4H9.NH2, of which there are four isomeric varieties.

butylate

to introduce the butyl group into (a chemical compound).

Butylene

Any one of three metameric hydrocarbons, C4H8, of the ethylene series. They are gaseous or easily liquefiable; -- called also butene.

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