different between mack vs buster

mack

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /mæk/

Etymology 1

Clipping of mackerel (pimp)

Noun

mack (plural macks)

  1. (slang) An individual skilled in the art of seduction using verbal skills.
    She left with him; he must be a true mack.
Derived terms
  • mack daddy

Verb

mack (third-person singular simple present macks, present participle macking, simple past and past participle macked)

  1. (slang) To act as pimp; to pander.
    Synonyms: hustle, whore out; see also Thesaurus:pimp out
  2. (slang) To seduce or flirt with.
    Synonyms: entice, pick up
Translations

Etymology 2

Clipping of mackintosh

Noun

mack (plural macks)

  1. (Britain) A raincoat or mackintosh.
Translations

Etymology 3

Blend of mast +? stack

Noun

mack (plural macks)

  1. An element of a ship's superstructure which places the function of a ship's mast on its exhaust stack, adding the skeletal supporting structure to the smokestack to support the mast's complement of functions.

Lower Sorbian

Etymology

mak +? -k

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /mat?sk/

Noun

mack m

  1. Oriental poppy (Papaver orientale)

Declension

Further reading

  • mack in Ernst Muka/Mucke (St. Petersburg and Prague 1911–28): S?ownik dolnoserbskeje r?cy a jeje nar?cow / Wörterbuch der nieder-wendischen Sprache und ihrer Dialekte. Reprinted 2008, Bautzen: Domowina-Verlag
  • mack in Manfred Starosta (1999): Dolnoserbsko-nimski s?ownik / Niedersorbisch-deutsches Wörterbuch. Bautzen: Domowina-Verlag.

Swedish

Etymology

Since 1920 from the trademark MACK, the abbreviation for "Mathiasson, Andersson, Collin, Key", the owners of one of the first companies that opened gas stations in Sweden.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /mak/

Noun

mack c

  1. (somewhat colloquial) gas station
    Synonyms: bensinmack, bensinstation

Declension

References

mack From the web:

  • what mackenzie means
  • what mackerel eat
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  • what mack means
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  • what macbook do i have
  • what mackerel fish look like
  • what makes


buster

English

Etymology

Originally a dialectal variant of burster; later influenced by bust +? -er.

The combining form of the term has appeared from the early 20th century but been especially prolific during three periods: in the 1930s, owing to the success of the radio series Gang Busters; in the 1940s, owing to its appearance as military slang; and in the 1980s, owing to the success of the movie Ghostbusters.

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -?st?(r)

Noun

buster (plural busters)

  1. (chiefly colloquial, with 'of') Someone who or something that bursts, breaks, or destroys a specified thing.
    • 1614, S. Jerome, Moses his Sight of Canaan, 147:
      Now death, I pray thee what is it, but a buster of bonds; a destruction of toyle?
    • 2005, J. Madhavan, Sita & Forest Bandits, 122:
      Rothlin was described... by the papers as the buster of the bandit ring.
  2. (chiefly military slang) Forming compounds denoting a team, weapon, or device specialized in the destruction of the first element.
    • 1940 September 2, Life, 29/1:
      German ‘balloon busters’ attack the Dover barrage.
    • 1958 February 10, Life, 70:
      Our main purpose in further experimentation with nuclear bombs is not... to make city-busters more horrible.
  3. (chiefly colloquial, with 'of') Someone who or something that 'breaks', tames, or overpowers a specified person or thing.
    1. (US, in particular, dated, slang) A broncobuster.
      • 1891 July, Harper's Magazine, 208/2
        The buster must be careful to keep well away from sheds and timber.
    2. (chiefly law enforcement slang) Forming compounds denoting an agent or agency tasked with reducing or eliminating the first element.
      • 1920, F. A. McKenzie, ‘Pussyfoot’ Johnson, v. 83:
        Men nicknamed him the ‘Booze Buster’, and cartoonists loved to picture him, revolver in hand,... fighting the demon rum.
      • 1974 July 4, New Scientist, 65/2:
        The professional fraud-busters [of the art world].
      • 1984 November 18, N.Y. Times, iv. 24/2:
        New York City traffic agents have become Gridlock Busters and cigarette foes are smokebusters.
  4. (dated, slang) Someone or something remarkable, especially for being loud, large, etc..
    • 1833 April, Parthenon, 293:
      ‘I had to clean this old roarer,’ continued the ‘editor’... as he wiped the barrel of his pistol. ‘She's a buster, I tell you.’
    • 2004 November 20, South Wales Echo, 9:
      What a buster of a lunch it turned out to be.
    1. (colloquial, variously expressing familiarity, admiration, or hostility) A form of address, particularly of men: guy, dude, fella, mack, buddy, loser. (Originally as 'old buster'.)
      • 1838 March 24, New Yorker, 4/1:
        That's generous, old buster.
      • 1919, P.G. Wodehouse, My Man Jeeves, 79:
        An extremely wealthy old buster.
      • 2001, S. MacKay, Fall Guy, ix. 113:
        ‘Careful, buster,’ she said. ‘I've got a knife in my hand.’
  5. (obsolete, slang) A loaf of bread.
    • 1835 September 16, Morning Post, 4/2:
      Three penny busters, and a whole kit-full of winegar and mustard.
    • 1904 June 8, Journal of the Department of Labour (New Zealand), 536:
      An 8oz. loaf of brown bread... goes by the name of ‘buster’, I suppose on account of the way they blow you out.
  6. (obsolete, slang) A drinking spree, a binge.
    • 1848, John Russell Bartlett, Dictionary of Americanisms:
      They were on a buster, and were taken up by the police.
    • 1922, James Joyce, Ulysses, 405:
      All off for a buster, armstrong, hollering down the street.
  7. (dated, slang) A gale, a strong wind; (especially Australia) a southerly buster.
    • 1886, Frank Cowan, Australia, 14:
      The Buster and Brickfielder: austral red-dust blizzard and red-hot Simoom.
    • 1991, J. Moore, By Way of Wind, 121:
      When the barometer drops rapidly... watch out for a strong sou'wester. A buster can be on you in a flash.
  8. (Australia and New Zealand) A heavy fall; (also performing arts) a staged fall, a pratfall.
    • 1874 April, Baily's Monthly Magazine, 114:
      Dainty... came down ‘a buster’ at the last hurdle, and Scots Grey cantered in by himself.
  9. (US, regional) A molting crab.
    • 1855 October 18, Henry A. Wise, letter in J.P. Hambleton's Biographical Sketch of Henry A. Wise (1856), 448:
      In that state he is called a ‘Buster’, bursting his shell.
    • 2002 January 6, N.Y. Times, v. 4/6:
      Restaurant August... serves contemporary French cuisine prepared with Louisiana ingredients like buster crabs, shrimp and oysters.
  10. (gambling, slang) A cheat's die whose sides bear only certain combinations of spots, so that undesirable values can never be rolled.
    • 1961, John Scarne, Complete Guide to Gambling (page 283)
      Tops and Bottoms (also Tops, Busters, Ts, Mis-spots): These are the dice used by the professional cheats.
    • 1977, National Institute of Law Enforcement and Criminal Justice, The Development of the Law of Gambling: 1776-1976 (page 423)
      To make six-eight, natural dice, or busters, he would take unspotted dice and then grind and color only the spots he wanted.

Related terms

Translations

References

  • buster in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.

Anagrams

  • Strube, Stuber, brutes, burets, rebuts, surbet, tubers

Danish

Noun

buster

  1. indefinite plural of buste

buster From the web:

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  • what buster level is naruto
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