Bush

Acceptable For Game Play - US & UK word lists

This word is acceptable for play in the US & UK dictionaries that are being used in the following games:

The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
  • n. A low shrub with many branches.
  • n. A thick growth of shrubs; a thicket.
  • n. Land covered with dense vegetation or undergrowth.
  • n. Land remote from settlement: the Australian bush.
  • n. A shaggy mass, as of hair.
  • n. Vulgar Slang A growth of pubic hair.
  • n. A fox's tail.
  • n. Archaic A clump of ivy hung outside a tavern to indicate the availability of wine inside.
  • n. Obsolete A tavern.
  • verb-intransitive. To grow or branch out like a bush.
  • verb-intransitive. To extend in a bushy growth.
  • v. To decorate, protect, or support with bushes.
  • adj. Slang Bush-league; second-rate: "Reviewers here have tended to see in him a kind of bush D.H. Lawrence” ( Saturday Review).
  • v. To furnish or line with a bushing.
  • Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
  • n. A thick washer or hollow cylinder of metal (also bushing).
  • n. A mechanical attachment, usually a metallic socket with a screw thread, such as the mechanism by which a camera is attached to a tripod stand.
  • v. To furnish with a bush or lining.
  • n. A tavern or wine merchant.
  • adj. Not skilled; not professional; not major league.
  • n. Amateurish behavior, short for "bush league behavior"
  • n. Rural areas, typically remote, wooded, undeveloped and uncultivated.
  • adj. The Australian use of the noun "bush", used attributively.
  • ad. Towards the direction of the outback.
  • n. A woody plant distinguished from a tree by its multiple stems and lower height, being usually less than six metres tall; a horticultural rather than strictly botanical category.
  • n. A person's pubic hair, especially a woman's; loosely, a woman's vulva.
  • the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English
  • n. A thicket, or place abounding in trees or shrubs; a wild forest.
  • n. A shrub; esp., a shrub with branches rising from or near the root; a thick shrub or a cluster of shrubs.
  • n. A shrub cut off, or a shrublike branch of a tree.
  • n. A shrub or branch, properly, a branch of ivy (as sacred to Bacchus), hung out at vintners' doors, or as a tavern sign; hence, a tavern sign, and symbolically, the tavern itself.
  • n. The tail, or brush, of a fox.
  • verb-intransitive. To branch thickly in the manner of a bush.
  • v. To set bushes for; to support with bushes.
  • v. To use a bush harrow on (land), for covering seeds sown; to harrow with a bush.
  • n. A lining for a hole to make it smaller; a thimble or ring of metal or wood inserted in a plate or other part of machinery to receive the wear of a pivot or arbor.
  • n. A piece of copper, screwed into a gun, through which the venthole is bored.
  • v. To furnish with a bush, or lining.
  • The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
  • n. A thicket; a clump of shrubs or trees.
  • n. A shrub with branches; a thick shrub; technically, a low and much-branched shrub.
  • n. A stretch of forest or of shrubby vegetation: a district covered with brushwood, or shrubs, trees, etc.; a wide uncultivated tract of country covered with scrub: as, the bush was here very dense; to take to the bush (to become a bush-ranger): so used especially in the British colonies of Australasia.
  • n. A branch of a tree fixed or hung out as a tavern sign. See ale-stake and ale-garland.
  • n. Hence The tavern itself.
  • n. The tail or brush of a fox.
  • To grow thick or bushy; serve or show as a bush.
  • To set bushes about; support with bushes or branched sticks: as, to bush peas.
  • 2. To use a bush-harrow on: as, to bush a piece of wood.
  • 3. To cover (seeds) by using a bush-harrow: as, to bush in seeds.
  • n. A lining of harder material let into an orifice to guard against wearing by friction; the perforated box or tube of metal fitted into certain parts of machinery, as the pivot-holes of a clock, the center of a cart-wheel, etc., to receive the wear of pivots, journals, and the like. Also called
  • n. A tailors' thimble. Also called bushel.
  • To furnish with a bush; line (an orifice, as one in which a pivot or axle works) with metal to prevent abrasion or to reduce the diameter.
  • n. In milling, a packing of wooden blocks placed in the eye of the bedstone and forming the upper bearing of the spindle.
  • To dress a stone with a bush-hammer.
  • WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
  • n. hair growing in the pubic area
  • n. vice president under Reagan and 41st President of the United States (born in 1924)
  • n. a low woody perennial plant usually having several major stems
  • n. dense vegetation consisting of stunted trees or bushes
  • n. a large wilderness area
  • n. United States electrical engineer who designed an early analogue computer and who led the scientific program of the United States during World War II (1890-1974)
  • v. provide with a bushing
  • adj. not of the highest quality or sophistication
  • n. 43rd President of the United States; son of George Herbert Walker Bush (born in 1946)
  • Equivalent
    inferior    bush goat   
    Verb Form
    bushed    bushes    bushing    bushs   
    Hypernym
    Words that are more generic or abstract
    Form
    bushed    bushing   
    Synonym
    Words with the same meaning
    shrub   
    Rhyme
    Words with the same terminal sound
    Busch    Cush    Kush    cush    kush    push    tush   
    Same Context
    Words that are found in similar contexts
    tree    thicket    shrub    grass    vine    branch    hedge    bough    pine    brush