different between bugs vs bunny
bugs
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /b??z/
Noun
bugs
- plural of bug
Verb
bugs
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of bug
Adjective
bugs (comparative more bugs, superlative most bugs)
- (slang) Crazy; unstable.
References
Anagrams
- BGSU, gubs
Danish
Noun
bugs c
- indefinite genitive singular of bug
Dutch
Pronunciation
Noun
bugs
- plural of bug
French
Noun
bugs m
- plural of bug
bugs From the web:
- what bugs are mistaken for bed bugs
- what bugs are attracted to led lights
- what bugs bite at night
- what bugs eat grass
- what bugs can bearded dragons eat
- what bugs can be mistaken for roaches
- what bugs eat wood
- what bugs can you eat
bunny
English
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation, General American) IPA(key): /?b?ni/
- Rhymes: -?ni
- Hyphenation: bun?ny
Etymology 1
From bun (“rabbit”) +? -y, though its ultimate origin is unknown. Together with rabbit, bunny has largely displaced its rhyme cony.
Noun
bunny (plural bunnies)
- A rabbit, especially a juvenile.
- A bunny girl: a nightclub waitress who wears a costume having rabbit ears and tail.
- (sports) In basketball, an easy shot (i.e., one right next to the bucket) that is missed.
Derived terms
Translations
Adjective
bunny (comparative bunnier, superlative bunniest)
- (skiing) Easy or unchallenging.
- Let’s start on the bunny slope.
Synonyms
- (easy or unchallenging): nursery
Etymology 2
From Middle English bony, boni (“swelling, tumor”), from Old French bugne, buigne (“swelling, lump”), from Old Frankish *bungjo (“swelling, bump”), from Proto-Germanic *bungô, *bunkô (“lump, clump, heap, crowd”). More at bunion, bunch.
Alternative forms
- bunney, bonie
Noun
bunny (plural bunnies)
- (Britain dialectal) A swelling from a blow; a bump.
- (mining) A sudden enlargement or mass of ore, as opposed to a vein or lode.
Etymology 3
From Middle English bune (“hollow stalk or stem, drinking straw”), from Old English bune (“cup, beaker, drinking vessel; reed, cane”), of unknown origin. Related to English bun, boon (“the stalk of flax or hemp less the fibre”), Scots bune, boon, been, see bun, boon. Compare also bunweed.
Noun
bunny (plural bunnies)
- (Britain dialectal) A culvert or short covered drain connecting two ditches.
- (Britain dialectal) A chine or gully formed by water running over the edge of a cliff; a wooded glen or small ravine opening through the cliff line to the sea.
- 1983, Geoffrey Morley, Smuggling in Hampshire and Dorset, 1700-1850 (page 72)
- Friar's Cliff and Highcliffe have always been what the second name suggests: cliffs too high to scale easily and with no convenient bunnies, chines or combes.
- 1983, Geoffrey Morley, Smuggling in Hampshire and Dorset, 1700-1850 (page 72)
- (Britain dialectal) Any small drain or culvert.
- (Britain dialectal) A brick arch or wooden bridge, covered with earth across a drawn or carriage in a water-meadow, just wide enough to allow a hay-wagon to pass over.
- (Britain dialectal) A small pool of water.
Etymology 4
Noun
bunny (plural bunnies)
- (South Africa) Bunny chow; a snack of bread filled with curry.
Etymology 5
From bun (“small bread roll”) +? -y.
Adjective
bunny (comparative more bunny or bunnier, superlative most bunny or bunniest)
- (rare, humorous) Resembling a bun (small bread roll). [since the 1960s, but always rare]
Synonyms
- (resembling a bun): bunlike
bunny From the web:
- what bunny eat
- what bunny girl senpai is about
- what bunny should i get
- what bunny walks on two legs
- what bunny should i get quiz
- what bunny are you quiz
- what bunny lives the longest
- what bunny breed stays small
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