buss

See also: Appendix:Variations of "bus"

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /bʌs/
  • Rhymes: -ʌs

Etymology 1

Origin uncertain; possibly ultimately imitative. Compare Arabic بُوسَة (būsa, kiss), Persian بوس (kiss (present stem)) and Latin basium (kiss).

Noun

buss (plural busses)

  1. (archaic) A kiss.
Synonyms

Verb

buss (third-person singular simple present busses, present participle bussing, simple past and past participle bussed)

  1. (transitive) To kiss (either literally or figuratively).
    • c. 1616, Shakespeare, King John, (1623) iii, iv p35:
      I will thinke thou smil'st, And busse thee as thy wife.
    • 1982, TC Boyle, Water Music, Penguin 2006, p. 189:
      As the repatriated explorer dodges down to buss the earth […] he is so thoroughly caught up in the rhapsody of the moment that he fails to take into account the traffic behind him.
    • 2007, Fiddlehead, Winter 61:
      Sam...really was six-ten and his head bussed the ceiling.
  2. (intransitive) To kiss.
    • 2007, James Isaiah Gabbe, LaRue's Maneuvers, Chapter 10, LaRue, The Blue Light, p259-60:
      In the faint glow of a single blue bulb hanging from a clothesline they bussed and fondled.
Synonyms

Etymology 2

From Dutch haringbuis.

Noun

buss (plural busses)

  1. A herring buss, a type of shallow-keeled Dutch fishing boat used especially for herring fishing.
    • Macaulay
      the Dutch whalers and herring busses

Etymology 3

Noun

buss (plural busses)

  1. Archaic form of bus (passenger vehicle).
    • Omnibuses, Sketches by Boz by Charles Dickens
      We will back the machine in which we make our daily peregrination from the top of Oxford-street to the city, against any buss on the road, whether it be for the gaudiness of its exterior, the perfect simplicity of its interior, or the native coolness of its cad.

Anagrams


Estonian

Etymology

Noun

buss (genitive bussi, partitive bussi)

  1. bus, a vehicle to transport people

Declension

Synonyms

Derived terms


Faroese

Noun

buss

  1. accusative singular of bussur
  2. genitive singular of bussur

Latvian

Noun

buss m (1st declension)

  1. (slang) bus (vehicle)

Declension

Synonyms


Norwegian Bokmål

Etymology 1

Either a direct shortening of Latin omnibus (for all), dative plural of omnis (all), or from English bus, itself a shortening of the Latin word.

Noun

buss m (definite singular bussen, indefinite plural busser, definite plural bussene)

  1. bus (vehicle)
    Tar du buss til skolen?
    Do you get to school by bus? (literally: "do you take bus to the school?")
    Jeg gråter heller i en Mercedes enn på bussen, for å si det sånn. (Anne-Kat. Hærland)
    I'd rather cry in a Mercedes than on the bus, to put it that way.
Derived terms
See also

Etymology 2

Uncertain, perhaps akin to butt, "blunt, thick, rounded".

Noun

buss m (definite singular bussen, indefinite plural busser, definite plural bussene)

  1. a quid of chewing tobacco
Usage notes

Rarely used.

References


Norwegian Nynorsk

Etymology 1

Either a direct shortening of Latin omnibus, "for all", dative plural of omnis, "all", or from English bus, itself a shortening of the Latin word.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /bʉsː/

Noun

buss m (definite singular bussen, indefinite plural bussar, definite plural bussane)

  1. bus (vehicle)
    Tek du buss til skulen?
    Do you get to school by bus? (literally: "do you take bus to the school?")
    Ein buss er eit kjøretøy som er utforma for å frakte ei mengd passasjerar over ein distanse på veg eller gate. (from Nynorsk edition of Wikipedia)
    A bus is a vehicle designed to transport a group of passengers for a distance along a road or a street.
Derived terms
See also

Etymology 2

Uncertain, perhaps akin to butt, "blunt, thick, rounded".

Noun

buss m (definite singular bussen, indefinite plural bussar, definite plural bussane)

  1. a quid of chewing tobacco
Usage notes

Rarely used.

Etymology 3

Perhaps from Low German or Dutch, compare boezem and its English cognate and equivalent bosom.

Alternative forms

Noun

buss m (definite singular bussen, indefinite plural bussar, definite plural bussane)

  1. The middel, curved part of a filled sail, fishing net or seine.
Usage notes

Very rarely used.

Etymology 4

From Low German busse, "short case or ring of metal for lining of an axle, shaft or bolt".

Noun

buss m (definite singular bussen, indefinite plural bussar, definite plural bussane)

  1. a hopper in a mill
  2. an iron ring surrounding such a hopper

References


Skolt Sami

Etymology

Noun

buss

  1. bus

Inflection

Even â-stem, sˈs-ss gradation
Nominative buss
Genitive buuss
Singular Plural
Nominative buss buuss
Accusative buuss buussid
Genitive buuss buussi
Illative buʹsse buussid
Locative buussâst buussin
Comitative buussin buussivuiʹm
Abessive buusstää buussitää
Essive bussân
Partitive bussâd
Possessive forms
Singular Dual Plural
1st person
2nd person
3rd person

Swedish

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /bɵs/
  • (file)

Adjective

buss (not comparable)

  1. like an old friend
    att vara buss med någon
    to be an old friend of someone
  • bussig

Interjection

buss

  1. command to a dog to attack: get, bite, catch
    buss på tjuven!
    get the thief!

Noun

buss c

  1. a bus, a vehicle to transport people.
    kommer inte bussen snart?
    doesn't the bus ever arrive?
  2. (computing) a bus
  3. an (old) soldier or sailor
  4. a portion of chewing tobacco
    han spottade ut bussen som han hade tuggat på
    he spat out the tobacco he'd been chewing

Declension

Declension of buss 
Singular Plural
Indefinite Definite Indefinite Definite
Nominative buss bussen bussar bussarna
Genitive buss bussens bussars bussarnas
  • busskort
  • busskrock
  • busskur
  • busskörfält
  • busslast
  • busslinje
  • bussning
  • busspark
  • bussresa
  • bussresenär
  • bussterminal
  • busstrafik
  • busstur
  • bussutflykt
  • långfärdsbuss
  • länsbuss
  • mätbuss
  • omnibus
  • parallellbuss
  • passagerarbuss
  • seriebuss
  • sightseeingbuss
  • sjöbuss
  • skolbuss
  • stadsbuss
  • turistbuss

References

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.