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TOEFL BNC: 2801 COCA: 34013

bush

bush /ˈbʊʃ/ noun
plural bushes
bush
/ˈbʊʃ/
noun
plural bushes
Learner's definition of BUSH
[count] : a plant that has stems of wood and is smaller than a tree灌木
[count] : a thick growth of hair or fur浓密的毛发
the bush : a large area (such as in Australia or Africa) that has not been cleared and that is not used for farming(澳大利亚、非洲等地的)丛林野地,未开垦地区

a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush

see bird

beat around the bush

or British beat about the bush
: to avoid saying something by talking about other things拐弯抹角地说;旁敲侧击
TOEFL BNC: 2801 COCA: 34013

bush

1 of 5

noun (1)

often attributive
1
a
: shrub
especially : a low densely branched shrub
b
: a close thicket of shrubs suggesting a single plant
2
: a large uncleared or sparsely settled area (as in Australia) usually scrub-covered or forested : wilderness
usually used with the
3
a
archaic : a bunch of ivy formerly hung outside a tavern to indicate wine for sale
b
obsolete : tavern
c
: advertising
good wine needs no bush William Shakespeare
4
: a bushy tuft or mass
a bush of hair
especially : brush entry 2 sense 2a
5
: minor league
usually used in plural
spent ten years in the bushes

bush

2 of 5

verb

bushed; bushing; bushes

transitive verb

: to support, mark, or protect with bushes

intransitive verb

: to extend like a bush : resemble a bush

bush

3 of 5

adjective (1)

1
: having a low-growing compact bushy habit
used especially of cultivated beans
bush snap beans
2
: serving, occurring in, or used in the bush
bush planes

bush

4 of 5

noun (2)

chiefly British

bush

5 of 5

adjective (2)

: falling below acceptable standards : unprofessional
bush behavior

Word History

Etymology

Noun (1)

Middle English bussh, bosch, buissh "woods, thicket, underbrush, shrub, underbrush concealing a hunter or fighter," later forms (probably assimilated to an Anglo-French variant of *buis, bois "woodland, wood [the material]" with a final hushing consonant) of boske, buske, going back to Old English *busc, going back to Germanic *buska- (perhaps also beside an earlier u-stem *busku-) (whence also Old Saxon -busc in brāmalbusk "bramble bush," Middle Dutch bosch, busch "forest, bunch, bundle," Old High German busc, bosc "shrub, bramble bush, thicket, grove," Old Swedish buske "bush," Old Norse [Norway] buskær, a nickname, probably "the bushy-haired one," Old Icelandic Buski, name for a dog, probably "the bristly one"), of uncertain origin; (sense 2) probably after Dutch bosch in this sense

Note: The Germanic pedigree of *buska- is relatively meager for the early periods. Old English *busc is perhaps evident in the place name Wardebusc, Veardebusc (modern Warboys in Huntingdonshire), attested in tenth-century charters, though Ekwall (Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place-Names) took it as of Scandinavian origin. The Old High German forms are attested only in glosses from the twelfth century or later. An earlier opinion, propounded in Skeat and the Oxford English Dictionary, first edition, was that the Germanic words were borrowed from "Late Latin"; however, Latin boscus "wood, woodland"—the form buscus is less frequent—is not attested before the early eighth century. The genuine depth of Germanic attestation for *buska- and congeners was thoroughly explicated by Johannes Hubschmied in "Romanisch-germanische Wortprobleme I. Zur Geschichte von bois, bûche (mit Berücksichtigung der Ortsnamen)," Vox Romanica, Band 29 (1970), pp. 82-122, 283-302. There now seems little question that the etymon is Germanic, and that corresponding Romance words are borrowed from Germanic. Note that beside *busk- a form *bosk- is evident in Middle English and elsewhere, especially Romance. Hubschmied explains *busk- as an outcome in an original u-stem, with *bosk- resulting from lowering before a non-high vowel in the next syllable; alternatively, the -u- could simply result from failure of lowering. Also widespread in Middle English, especially east midland and northern, and in early Scots, are forms without palatalized sk, as bosk(e), buske (compare bosky), which have been attributed both to Old Norse and to Anglo-French bosc. See also boiserie, boscage, bosquet and bouquet, and compare ambush entry 1.

Verb

derivative of bush entry 1

Adjective (1)

from attributive use of bush entry 1

Noun (2)

Dutch bus bushing, box, from Middle Dutch busse box, from Late Latin buxis — more at box entry 1

Adjective (2)

short for bush-league

First Known Use

Noun (1)

14th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1a

Verb

15th century, in the meaning defined at transitive sense

Adjective (1)

1595, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Noun (2)

1566, in the meaning defined above

Adjective (2)

1959, in the meaning defined above

Time Traveler
The first known use of bush was in the 14th century
TOEFL BNC: 2801 COCA: 34013
bush

noun¹

1plant植物ADJECTIVE | ... OF BUSHES | VERB + BUSH | BUSH + VERB | PREPOSITION | PHRASES ADJECTIVErose, thorn, etc.薔薇花叢、荊棘叢等prickly, scrubby, thorny多刺的灌木叢;矮樹叢... OF BUSHESclump一叢灌木a large clump of rose bushes一大片薔薇花叢VERB + BUSHplant種植灌木prune, trim修剪灌木to prune the rose bushes修剪薔薇花叢BUSH + VERBgrow灌木生長PREPOSITIONamong the bushes, in the bushes在灌木叢中She was hiding in the bushes at the side of the lane.她躲藏在道邊的灌木叢中。PHRASESbushes and trees, trees and bushes灌木和喬木
bush

noun²

2wild land in Africa/Australia非洲或澳大利亞的荒野ADJECTIVE | BUSH + NOUN | PREPOSITION ADJECTIVEdense, thick茂密的叢林African, Australian非洲/澳大利亞叢林native天然叢林地hills that have become a wasteland after the removal of native bush天然叢林清除後成為不毛之地的山嶺BUSH + NOUNfire叢林大火meat (usually bushmeat) 叢林肉(非洲野生動物肉)PREPOSITIONin the bush, into the bush進入叢林They went out into the bush.他們遠赴叢林。

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