What is the meaning of BUD. Phrases containing BUD
See meanings and uses of BUD!Slangs & AI meanings
Buddy Holly is London Cockney rhyming slang for volley.Buddy Holly is London Cockney rhyming slang for a pickled cucumber (wally), a fool (wally).
If you want to sit down and someone is taking up too much space, you'd ask them to budge up - move and make some space.
, (bud) n., The best part of the marijuana plant, where most of the oils and drug are concentrated. A word for marijuana, bot., cannabis sativa. “Hey, you have some great bud there.â€Â [Etym., drug sub-culture]
marijuana. "Let's go smoke some bud." Lyrical reference: THREE 6 MAFIE LYRICS - Liquor and Dat Bud "Wit that liquor and dat bud..."Â
n cotton swabs, or “Q-Tips.” When I came back from Tenerife with an ear infection I deduced had come from swimming in the sea, I got a telling-off from the doctor for attempting to cure myself with the aid of some cotton buds. According to the doctor, you should “never put anything at all into your ear smaller than your elbow.” Medical advice dispensed here at no extra cost.
marijuana
a high-grade cannabis joint
Buddha sticks is slang for cannabis.
potent marijuana. See buds
making reference to a person whose name you don’t’ know or forgot. “Eh buddy.â€
potent marijuana spiked with opium
alkyl nitrite
Buddy is American slang for a male friend.
Budgie is British slang for a talkative person.
What you say when you go party. Example: “It’s Friday night-I’m ready to just go out and get my budgies on!
Buddha is slang for cannabis.
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a.
Lined with budge; hence, scholastic.
imp. & p. p.
of Budge
n.
The act or process of producing buds.
n.
The religion based upon the doctrine originally taught by the Hindoo sage Gautama Siddartha, surnamed Buddha, "the awakened or enlightened," in the sixth century b. c., and adopted as a religion by the greater part of the inhabitants of Central and Eastern Asia and the Indian Islands. Buddha's teaching is believed to have been atheistic; yet it was characterized by elevated humanity and morality. It presents release from existence (a beatific enfranchisement, Nirvana) as the greatest good. Buddhists believe in transmigration of souls through all phases and forms of life. Their number was estimated in 1881 at 470,000,000.
n.
A process of asexual reproduction, in which a new organism or cell is formed by a protrusion of a portion of the animal or vegetable organism, the bud thus formed sometimes remaining attached to the parent stalk or cell, at other times becoming free; gemmation. See Hydroidea.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Budge
a.
Of or pertaining to Buddha, Buddhism, or the Buddhists.
n.
A bag or sack with its contents; hence, a stock or store; an accumulation; as, a budget of inventions.
n.
One who accepts the teachings of Buddhism.
v. t.
To graft, as a plant with another or into another, by inserting a bud from the one into an opening in the bark of the other, in order to raise, upon the budded stock, fruit different from that which it would naturally bear.
a.
Same as Buddhist, a.
v. i.
To put forth or produce buds, as a plant; to grow, as a bud does, into a flower or shoot.
n.
The act or process of ingrafting one kind of plant upon another stock by inserting a bud under the bark.
v. i.
To be like a bud in respect to youth and freshness, or growth and promise; as, a budding virgin.
v. i.
To begin to grow, or to issue from a stock in the manner of a bud, as a horn.
n.
One who budges.
n.
The title of an incarnation of self-abnegation, virtue, and wisdom, or a deified religious teacher of the Buddhists, esp. Gautama Siddartha or Sakya Sinha (or Muni), the founder of Buddhism.
n.
A little bud springing from a parent bud.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Bud
v. i.
To wash ore in a buddle.
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