bus
n 1: a vehicle carrying many passengers; used for public
transport; "he always rode the bus to work" [syn: bus,
autobus, coach, charabanc, double-decker, jitney,
motorbus, motorcoach, omnibus, passenger vehicle]
2: the topology of a network whose components are connected by a
busbar [syn: bus topology, bus]
3: an electrical conductor that makes a common connection
between several circuits; "the busbar in this computer can
transmit data either way between any two components of the
system" [syn: busbar, bus]
4: a car that is old and unreliable; "the fenders had fallen off
that old bus" [syn: bus, jalopy, heap]
v 1: send or move around by bus; "The children were bussed to
school"
2: ride in a bus
3: remove used dishes from the table in restaurants
bus I. noun (pluralbuses; alsobusses)
Usage: often attributive Etymology: short for omnibusDate: circa 1909 1.a. a large motor vehicle designed to carry passengers usually
along a fixed route according to a schedule b.automobile2. a small hand truck 3.a.bus barb. a set of parallel conductors in a computer
system that forms a main transmission path
4. a spacecraft or missile that carries one or more detachable
devices (as warheads) II. verb (bused; alsobussed; busing; alsobussing)
Date: circa 1909 intransitive verb1. to travel by bus 2. to work as a busboy
transitive verb1. to transport by bus 2.a.clear 4d <bus dishes> b. to remove
dirty dishes from <bus tables>
III. abbreviation business
bus n. & v. --n. (pl. buses or US busses) 1 a large passenger vehicle, esp. one serving the public on a fixed route. 2 colloq. a motor car, aeroplane, etc. 3 Computing a defined set of
conductors carrying data and control signals within a computer. --v. (buses or busses, bussed, bussing) 1 intr. go by bus. 2 tr. US transport by bus, esp. to promote racial
integration. Phrases and idioms: bus lane a part of a road's length marked off mainly for use by buses. bus shelter a shelter from rain etc. beside a bus stop. bus station a centre, esp.
in a town, where (esp. long-distance) buses depart and arrive. bus-stop 1 a regular stopping-place of a bus. 2 a sign marking this. Etymology: abbr. of OMNIBUS
bus
(buses, busses, bussing, bussed)Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.Note: The plural form of the noun is 'buses'. The third person singular of the verb is
'busses'. American English uses the spellings 'buses', 'busing', 'bused' for the verb.
1. A bus is a large motor vehicle which carries passengers from one place to another. Buses
drive along particular routes, and you have to pay to travel in them.
He missed his last bus home...They had to travel everywhere by bus.N-COUNT: also by N
2. When someone is bussed to a particular place or when they bus there, they
travel there on a bus.
On May Day hundreds of thousands used to be bussed in to parade through East Berlin...To get our Colombian visas we bussed back to Medellin...Essential services were provided by Serbian workers bussed in from outside the province.VERB: be V-ed adv/prep, V adv/prep, V-ed, also V n adv/prep
3. In some parts of the United States, when children are bused to school, they are
transported by bus to a school in a different area so that children of different races can be
educated together.
Many schools were in danger of closing because the children were bused out to other
neighborhoods.VERB: usu passive, be V-ed adv/prep
• busingThe courts ordered busing to desegregate the schools.N-UNCOUNT
bus
bʌs n. & v. --n. (pl. buses or US busses) 1 a large passenger
vehicle, esp. one serving the public on a fixed route. 2 colloq. a motor car,
aeroplane, etc. 3 Computing a defined set of conductors carrying data and
control signals within a computer. --v. (buses or busses, bussed, bussing)
1 intr. go by bus. 2 tr. US transport by bus, esp. to promote racial
integration. øbus lane a part of a road's length marked off mainly for
use by buses. bus shelter a shelter from rain etc. beside a bus stop. bus
station a centre, esp. in a town, where (esp. long-distance) buses depart
and arrive. bus-stop 1 a regular stopping-place of a bus. 2 a sign marking
this. [abbr. of OMNIBUS]
BUS Bartholin, Urethral, Skein's Bartholin, Urethral, And Skenes Everything on the satellite except the mission payload Black United Students Bodies Under Siege Between Use
Storage Business Greyhound Lines, Inc.
bus Bartholin, Urethral, Skein's Bartholin, Urethral, And Skenes Everything on the satellite except the mission payload Black United Students Bodies Under Siege Between Use
Storage Business Greyhound Lines, Inc.
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