Bud
41Bud — noun /bʌd/ a) A male nickname. I remember many visits from my uncle Bud. b) A nickname for the beer . Id like a Bud, please …
42bud — Synonyms and related words: Anlage, acrospire, aunt, auntie, blood brother, boy, brethren, brother, bub, bubba, buck, buddy, burgeon, burst forth, chick, chickabiddy, colt, country cousin, cousin, cousin once removed, cousin twice removed, cub,… …
43bud — • föreskrift, stadga, bestämmelse, befallning, bud, order, regel, reglemente • budskap, bud, meddelande, underrättelse, besked …
44bud — [14] Bud is something of a mystery word. It appears in the late 14th century, with no apparent English ancestors. Various suggestions have been put forward as to its origin, including Old French boter ‘push forward, thrust’ (a distant relative of …
45bud — bud1 noun 1》 a compact knob like growth on a plant which develops into a leaf, flower, or shoot. 2》 Biology an outgrowth from an organism that separates to form a new individual asexually. 3》 Zoology a rudimentary leg or other appendage of an… …
46bud — n 1. sprout, burgeon, shoot, blade; stem, twig, spray, sprig; floweret, floret. v 2. bud, sprout, begin to grow, germinate, pullulate, send out shoots, put forth; bloom, blossom, open, flower, bear fruit, fructify; spring up, burst forth, shoot… …
47bud — Liko, ōpu u. Also: mu o, olomu o, ōmu o, ōliko, māliko, hāliko, ao, maka, mamaka, ōmaka, ho opuliko, hāpu u, ōme o. ♦ To bud just a little, to cease budding, mu oiki, mū okole, mu omu okole. ♦ Young plant bud, niho peku …
48bud — is. anat. Qıçın çanaq sümüyü ilə dizə qədər olan hissəsi. Bud sümüyü. Bud əti. – <Çingiz:> Bir budu şişə çəkib iki çörək ilə tək yemişəm. Ə. H …
49bud — [14] Bud is something of a mystery word. It appears in the late 14th century, with no apparent English ancestors. Various suggestions have been put forward as to its origin, including Old French boter ‘push forward, thrust’ (a distant relative of …
50bud — Normally a short form of ‘buddy’. It is used by a male American speaker to another man in The Philanderer, by Stanley Kauffmann. There is similar, friendly usage in Funeral in Berlin, by Len Deighton; Goldfinger, by Ian Fleming. In Girl with… …