[
US
/ˈbəns/
]
NOUN
-
a sudden happening that brings good fortune (as a sudden opportunity to make money)
the demand for testing has created a boom for those unregulated laboratories where boxes of specimen jars are processed like an assembly line
How To Use bunce In A Sentence
- A duck or a goose from Bunce?
- It was the more provoking, as Bunce himself could write his name legibly, and one of those three doubting souls had for years boasted of like power, and possessed, indeed, a Bible, in which he was proud to show his name written by himself some thirty years ago -- "Job Skulpit;" but it was thought that Job Skulpit, having forgotten his scholarship, on that account recoiled from the petition, and that the other doubters would follow as he led them. The Warden
- The sharpest financial blow came in mid-1939, when the owner of Bunce Court decided she wanted to sell the freehold.
- We did that once, lost all our bunce.
- Their names were Farmer Boggis, Farmer Bunce and Farmer Bean.
- GAMA president and CEO Pete Bunce used the report to bolster the industry's case against new user fees proposed by President Obama.
- Toward the end of the novel, Cubbage has an encounter with a ratcatcher called Bunce who—like the bizarre doctor in Foreign Intelligence—looks like a rodent. Storyteller
- It was in vain that the late warden endeavoured to comfort the heart of the old bedesman; poor old Bunce felt that his days of comfort were gone. The Warden
- Dmgt is paying big bunce to get into an online recruitment market currently worth £100m a year, around seven per cent of the UK's entire recruitment advertising.
- * The soeaker* of the House of Commons thougnt it hte doty to aonbuncettfc - #eoeipt of my letter, and - it was read from 4fe chair. The Parliamentary Register: Or an Impartial Report of the Debates that Have Occured in the Two ...