Frances Mary. 1827–94, British educationalist; a pioneer of secondary education for girls, who campaigned for women's admission to university
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2025
bus1 /bʌs/USA pronunciation
n., pl. bus•es, bus•ses, v., bused or bussed, bus•ing or bus•sing.
n. [countable]
v.
bus2 /bʌs/USA pronunciation v., bused or bussed/bʌst/USA pronunciation bus•ing or bus•sing.
bus., an abbreviation of:
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2025n. [countable]
- Transporta large, long motor vehicle equipped with seating for passengers:The children waited for the school bus.
v.
- Transportto travel by bus;
to carry, convey, or transport by bus: [no object]Let's see if we can bus back to the hotel.[~ + object]People were bused in to take part in the demonstration. - Transport to transport (pupils) to school by bus, esp. as a means of achieving racial integration:[~ + object]claimed that children are bused to schools in trips that take an hour or more.
bus2 /bʌs/USA pronunciation v., bused or bussed/bʌst/USA pronunciation bus•ing or bus•sing.
- to work as a busboy or busgirl: [no object]He bused most school nights and weekends.[~ + object]See if he'll bus that table now.
bus., an abbreviation of:
- business.
buss
(bus),USA pronunciation n., v.t., v.i.
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2025- kiss.
- 1560–70; perh. blend of, blended obsolete bass kiss and obsolete cuss kiss (cognate with German Kuss; replacing Middle English, Old English coss (cognate with Old Norse koss))
bus1
(bus),USA pronunciation n., pl. bus•es, bus•ses, v., bused or bussed, bus•ing or bus•sing.
n.
v.t.
v.i.
bus2 (bus),USA pronunciation v.i., v.t., bused or bussed, bus•ing or bus•sing.
bus.,
n.
- Transporta large motor vehicle, having a long body, equipped with seats or benches for passengers, usually operating as part of a scheduled service; omnibus.
- Transporta similar horse-drawn vehicle.
- Transporta passenger automobile or airplane used in a manner resembling that of a bus.
- Transportany vehicle operated to transport children to school.
- Furniturea low, movable filing cabinet.
- Computinga circuit that connects the CPU with other devices in a computer.
v.t.
- Transportto convey or transport by bus:to bus the tourists to another hotel.
- Transportto transport (pupils) to school by bus, esp. as a means of achieving racial integration.
v.i.
- Transportto travel on or by means of a bus:We bused to New York on a theater trip.
- 1825–35; short for omnibus; (def. 6) short for omnibus bar
bus2 (bus),USA pronunciation v.i., v.t., bused or bussed, bus•ing or bus•sing.
- to work or act as a busboy or busgirl:She bused for her meals during her student days.
- back formation from busboy 1830–40
bus.,
- business.
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
- an archaic or dialect word for kiss
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
a large motor vehicle designed to carry passengers between stopping places along a regular route
More formal name: omnibus- short for trolleybus
- (modifier)
of or relating to a bus or buses: a bus driver, a bus station a car or aircraft, esp one that is old and shaky - short for busbar
a platform in a space vehicle used for various experiments and processes - miss the bus ⇒
to miss an opportunity; be too late - park the bus ⇒
(of a sports team) to play in a very defensive way
to travel or transport by bus to transport (children) by bus from one area to a school in another in order to create racially integrated classes
'Buss' also found in these entries (note: many are not synonyms or translations):