buz (countable anduncountable ,plural buzzes )
Obsolete form ofbuzz ( “ humming sound ” ) .1814 May 9 , [Jane Austen ], chapter XXV, inMansfield Park: [ … ] , volume(please specify |volume=I to III) , London: [ … ] [ George Sidney] forT[ homas] Egerton , [ … ] ,→OCLC :As soon as a generalbuz gave him shelter, he added, in a low voice directed at Fanny,[ …]
1831 , James Rennie,Insect Architecture: Volume 3 , page90 :Thebuz of flies has been found no less difficult to explain than the hum of bees.
Obsolete form ofbuzz ( “ counting game, fizz-buzz ” ) .1876 ,Ballou's Monthly Magazine , volume44 , page590 :[ …] and finally, laughing and all tired out, they stopped to rest and to think of some other game. They played “Buz ” till they were rested, and then “Genteel Lady,” where every time a little girl made a mistake she had to have a lamplighter stuck in her hair.
buz (third-person singular simple present buzzes ,present participle buzzing ,simple past and past participle buzzed )
Obsolete form ofbuzz .(Can wefind and add a quotation of Maria Edgeworth to this entry?) The bee [ …] began to stretch his wings and to clean himself, and tobuz a little upon the flower. FromProto-Turkic *būŕ .
buz (definite accusative buzu ,plural buzlar )
ice buz m
victory profit Inherited fromProto-Turkic *būŕ .
buz
ice Synonym: ( northern dialect ) muz FromProto-Turkic *būŕ .
buz (definite accusative buzu ,plural buzlar )
ice FromProto-Turkic *būŕ . Cognate toCrimean Tatar buz ,Karachay-Balkar буз ( buz ) ,Kumyk буз ( buz ) , etc.
buz
ice N. A. Baskakov, S.M. Šapšala, editor (1973 ), “buz ”, inKaraimsko-Russko-Polʹskij Slovarʹ [Karaim-Russian-Polish Dictionary ], Moscow: Moskva,→ISBN Borrowed fromTurkish buz .
buz
ice Synonym: yelo buz
icy Borrowed fromEnglish boots .
buz m (collective ,singulative buza ,plural bwiez or buzien or ( plural of plural ) buzijiet ,paucal buziet )
pair ofboots 2008 , Trevor Żahra,Il-Ġenn li Jżommni f’Sikti , Merlin Publishers,→ISBN :Kellibuz wellington twil sa rkobbtejja li bih stajt ngħaddi nċaflas mill-għadajjar[ …] I wore long Wellingtonboots up to my knees, with which I could wade through the puddles [ …] FromOttoman Turkish بوز ( buz ) , ultimately fromProto-Turkic *būŕ .
CompareMongolian мөс ( mös ,“ ice ” ) .( Canthis (+ ) etymology besourced ?)
IPA (key ) : /ˈbuz/ Hyphenation:buz buz (definite accusative buzu ,plural buzlar )
ice FromProto-Turkic *būŕ .
būz (definite accusative buzy ,plural būzlar )
ice “buz ” inEnedilim.com “buz ” inWebonary.org