[
US
/ˈbjuɡəɫ/
]
[ UK /bjˈuːɡəl/ ]
[ UK /bjˈuːɡəl/ ]
NOUN
- a brass instrument without valves; used for military calls and fanfares
- any of various low-growing annual or perennial evergreen herbs native to Eurasia; used for ground cover
- a tubular glass or plastic bead sewn onto clothing for decoration
VERB
- play on a bugle
How To Use bugle In A Sentence
- Sophie's more casual outfit consists of a black Powerline stretch sleeveless top, Kismet's own label sarong, and an orange, multi-strand bugle bead bracelet.
- The escalade was to be attempted by a band of ten; five of the trumpeters and buglemen were selected and four centurions, the Ligurian was to be their guide. A History of Rome During the Later Republic and Early Principate
- The bugle calls multiply till the woods seem filled with an advancing army and the yells split the sky. Canada: the Empire of the North Being the Romantic Story of the New Dominion's Growth from Colony to Kingdom
- Adam had distributed the instruments among the unarmed men of the Caves, and told them to get on with bugle practice. KARA KUSH
- The bugler sounded the retreat .
- We found some, but not the great swathes that we had hoped for, although we were rewarded by plenty of patches of bluebells, drifts of wood anemones, a glade with masses of milkmaids and lots of primroses, cowslips and violas and bugle.
- In Winchester a single bugle player sounded the Last Post before the cathedral grounds fell silent.
- All versions of PGP except MIT PGP 2.6.2 are susceptible to a "buglet" in clearsigned messages, making it possible to add text to the beginning of a clearsigned message. FAQ: Alt.Security.PGP (Part II)
- She woke early to her Palm PC singing a reveille bugle call.
- Good morning wegie, paddington, scotia and buglet. Wired Campus