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WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2025bull1 /bʊl/USA pronunciation
n. [countable]
- Mammalsthe male of the cow family:The bull charged the matador in the arena.
- Mammalsthe male of certain other animals, as the elephant:the bull elephants.
- a person who believes that stock prices will increase:The bulls went on a spree today, and the stock market soared.Compare bear.
adj. [before a noun]
- Businessmarked by rising prices, esp. of stocks: a bull market.
Idioms
- Idioms bull in a china shop, an awkward or clumsy person:He was like a bull in a china shop at that party, tripping over guests and getting in the way.
- Idioms take the bull by the horns, to attack a difficult or risky problem boldly:He decided to take the bull by the horns and confront his boss.
bull2 /bʊl/USA pronunciation
n. [countable]
- Religiona formal document issued by a pope:the papal bull.
bull3 /bʊl/USA pronunciation
Slang.n. [uncountable]
- Slang Termsexaggerations;
lies; nonsense:That story about his rescuing those flyers was complete bull.
v. [~ + object]
- Slang Termsto try to fool or impress by lies or exaggeration:Don't bull me; just tell me what's going on.
Idioms
- Idioms, Slang Terms shoot the bull, to engage in friendly, easygoing conversation:We sat around all night shooting the bull.
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2025bull1
(bŏŏl),USA pronunciation n.
- the male of a bovine animal, esp. of the genus Bos, with sexual organs intact and capable of reproduction.
- the male of certain other animals, as the elephant and moose.
- a large, solidly built person.
- a person who believes that market prices, esp. of stocks, will increase (opposed to bear).
- (cap.) [Astron., Astrol.]the constellation or sign of Taurus.
- a bulldog.
- [Slang.]a police officer.
- bull in a china shop:
- an awkward or clumsy person.
- an inconsiderate or tactless person.
- a troublemaker;
dangerous person.
- take the bull by the horns, to attack a difficult or risky problem fearlessly.
adj.
- male.
- of, pertaining to, or resembling a bull, as in strength.
- having to do with or marked by a continuous trend of rising prices, as of stocks:a bull market.
v.t.
- [Stock Exchange.]to attempt to raise the price of.
- to speculate in, in expectation of a rise in price.
- to force;
shove:to bull one's way through a crowd.
- [Naut.]to ram (a buoy).
- 1150–1200; Middle English bule, Old English bula; akin to Old Norse boli; see bullock
bull′-like′, adj.
bull2
(bŏŏl),USA pronunciation n.
- a bulla or seal.
- [Rom. Cath. Ch.]a formal papal document having a bulla attached.
- Medieval Latin bulla seal, sealed document; see bulla
- Anglo-French
- Middle English bulle 1250–1300
bull3
(bŏŏl),USA pronunciation n. [Slang.]
- Slang Termsexaggerations;
lies; nonsense.
- Slang Terms shoot the bull, to talk aimlessly:We just sat around shooting the bull.
- Medieval Latin bulla play, game, jest, perh. special use of Latin bulla bubble; now generally taken as a euphemistic shortening of bullshit
- 1620–30
Bull
(bŏŏl),USA pronunciation n.
- Biographical John. See John Bull.
Bull
(bo̅o̅l),USA pronunciation n.
O•le (Bor•ne•mann)
(ō′lə bor′nə män′),USA pronunciation 1810–80, Norwegian violinist and composer.
bull., - bulletin.
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
bull / bʊl/ - any male bovine animal, esp one that is sexually mature
- the male of various other animals including the elephant and whale
- a very large, strong, or aggressive person
- a speculator who buys in anticipation of rising prices in order to make a profit on resale
- (as modifier): a bull market
Compare bear25 short for bull's-eye1, short for bullshit- short for bulldog, bull terrier
- a bull in a china shop ⇒ a clumsy person
- take the bull by the horns ⇒ to face and tackle a difficulty without shirking
- male; masculine: a bull elephant
- large; strong
Etymology: Old English bula, from Old Norse boli; related to Middle Low German bulle, Middle Dutch bolle bull / bʊl/ - a ludicrously self-contradictory or inconsistent statement
Etymology: 17th Century: of uncertain origin bull / bʊl/ - a formal document issued by the pope, written in antiquated characters and often sealed with a leaden bulla
Etymology: 13th Century: from Medieval Latin bulla seal attached to a bull, from Latin: round object
'bulls' also found in these entries (note: many are not synonyms or translations):
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