buss

[ UK /bˈʌs/ ]
[ US /ˈbəs/ ]
VERB
  1. touch with the lips or press the lips (against someone's mouth or other body part) as an expression of love, greeting, etc.
    The newly married couple kissed
    She kissed her grandfather on the forehead when she entered the room
NOUN
  1. the act of caressing with the lips (or an instance thereof)
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How To Use buss In A Sentence

  • Maybe the term "bussed" was a misnomer, as it sounds too organzied, but ... BlogTO
  • In her dying depositions she accused Osio of having pushed her in; and there seems little doubt that he did so; for while she was struggling in the water, he disengaged his harquebuss from his mantle and struck her several blows upon the head and hands. Renaissance in Italy, Volumes 1 and 2 The Catholic Reaction
  • This time all three acts were paired with a work from Debussy – Act I with Printemps, Act II with Trois Nocturnes, and Act III with La damoiselle élue. Archive 2007-04-01
  • So, I'm still bussing the girls back to their schools in Barnes - can you believe it?
  • As the train stopped for its human freight at each station it slowly gathered a cargo of trammies and bussies making for their depots.
  • When louted low the Moon at full to buss the Earth. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • Because of opposition to a catenary system, the surface system uses busses powered by compressed natural gas.
  • Buss her, wap in rogues 'rum lingo, for, O, my dimber wapping dell! Ulysses
  • What kind of rich man doesn't own a TV remote, makes all his own food, cleans his own clothes, busses his own table, and exercises WITHOUT vain motivations? Why Don’t More Women Ride? « PubliCola
  • After a hearty breakfast consuming our surplus food, we embussed to Lake Rotoroa.
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