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bust
Bust tarimas:
/bʌst/
Bust audio:
Žodžio paaiškinimas anglų kalba:
- noun: A sculpture representing a person's head, shoulders, and upper chest.
- noun: A woman's bosom.
- noun: The human chest.
- verb-transitive: Slang To smash or break, especially forcefully: "Mr. Luger worked it with a rake, busting up the big clods, making a flat brown table” ( Garrison Keillor).
- verb-transitive: Slang To render inoperable or unusable: busted the vending machine by putting in foreign coins.
- verb-transitive: To cause to come to an end; break up: an attempt to bust the union.
- verb-transitive: To break or tame (a horse).
- verb-transitive: To cause to become bankrupt or short of money: "Too often, the promise of a high-tech design leads to a weapon that busts the budget” ( Business Week).
- verb-transitive: Slang To reduce in rank. See Synonyms at
demote . - verb-transitive: To hit; punch.
- verb-transitive: Slang To place under arrest.
- verb-transitive: Slang To make a police raid on.
- verb-intransitive: Slang To undergo breakage; become broken.
- verb-intransitive: Slang To burst; break: "Several companies have threatened to bust out of their high-wage contracts by the dubious technique of declaring bankruptcy” ( Washington Post).
- verb-intransitive: To become bankrupt or short of money.
- verb-intransitive: Games To lose at blackjack by exceeding a score of 21.
- noun: A failure; a flop: "The home-style bean curd is a bust, oily and rubbery” ( Mark and Gail Barnett).
- noun: A state of bankruptcy.
- noun: A time or period of widespread financial depression: "Bankers consider the region's diversified economy to be good protection against a possible real estate bust” ( American Banker).
- noun: A punch; a blow.
- noun: A spree: a fraternity beer bust.
- noun: Slang An arrest.
- noun: Slang A raid.
- idiom: butt Vulgar Slang To make a strenuous effort; work very hard.
Lietuviškos reikšmės:
- biustas