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buss
[ buhs ]
Buss
1/ bʌs /
noun
- BussFrances Mary18271894FBritishEDUCATION: educationalist Frances Mary . 1827–94, British educationalist; a pioneer of secondary education for girls, who campaigned for women's admission to university
buss
2/ bʌs /
noun
- an archaic or dialect word for kiss
Word History and Origins
Origin of buss1
Word History and Origins
Origin of buss1
Example Sentences
Schiff was a familiar face to many of the volunteers, who had been bussed in from California by labor unions to knock on doors.
“I loaded trucks, parked cars at the Hilton garage, bussed tables, waited tables, tended bar. I worked as background and a stand-in in 35 films before I ever spoke.”
But despite the breakthrough moment and subsequent surge in the polls, Ms Harris later struggled to articulate her own position on bussing.
His mother - a public sector healthcare worker - would come home and say she and her colleagues had been bussed to polling stations where they were told: "Vote for Putin, or we’ll take away your bonus."
She attacked Mr Biden for an earlier campaign moment in which he fondly recalled working with two segregationist senators, before accusing him of opposing the bussing of students between schools to help integrate them.
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