bus
♦ bus /b'ʌs/ (buses busses bussing bussed)
The plural form of the noun is buses. The third person singular of the verb is busses. American English uses the spellings buses, busing, bused for the verb.
1 [N-COUNT] also by N
A bus is a large motor vehicle which carries passengers from one place to another. Buses drive along particular routes, and you have to pay to travel in them.
He missed his last bus home...
They had to travel everywhere by bus.
2 [VERB] be V-ed adv/prep, V adv/prep, V-ed, also V n adv/prep
When someone is bussed to a particular place or when they bus there, they travel there on a bus.
On May Day hundreds of thousands used to be bussed in to parade through East Berlin...
To get our Colombian visas we bussed back to Medellin...
Essential services were provided by Serbian workers bussed in from outside the province.
3 [VERB] usu passive, be V-ed adv/prep
In some parts of the United States, when children are bused to school, they are transported by bus to a school in a different area so that children of different races can be educated together.
Many schools were in danger of closing because the children were bused out to other neighborhoods.
● busing [N-UNCOUNT]
The courts ordered busing to desegregate the schools.bus boy (bus boys)
[N-COUNT]
A bus boy is someone whose job is to set or clear tables in a restaurant. (AM)bus lane (bus lanes)
[N-COUNT]
A bus lane is a part of the road which is intended to be used only by buses.bus shel|ter (bus shelters)
[N-COUNT]
A bus shelter is a bus stop that has a roof and at least one open side.bus stop (bus stops)
[N-COUNT]
A bus stop is a place on a road where buses stop to let passengers on and off.school bus (school buses)
[N-COUNT]
A school bus is a special bus which takes children to and from school.trol|ley bus (trolley buses)
[N-COUNT] also by N
A trolley bus is a bus that is driven by electric power taken from cables above the street.
The plural form of the noun is buses. The third person singular of the verb is busses. American English uses the spellings buses, busing, bused for the verb.
1 [N-COUNT] also by N
A bus is a large motor vehicle which carries passengers from one place to another. Buses drive along particular routes, and you have to pay to travel in them.
He missed his last bus home...
They had to travel everywhere by bus.
2 [VERB] be V-ed adv/prep, V adv/prep, V-ed, also V n adv/prep
When someone is bussed to a particular place or when they bus there, they travel there on a bus.
On May Day hundreds of thousands used to be bussed in to parade through East Berlin...
To get our Colombian visas we bussed back to Medellin...
Essential services were provided by Serbian workers bussed in from outside the province.
3 [VERB] usu passive, be V-ed adv/prep
In some parts of the United States, when children are bused to school, they are transported by bus to a school in a different area so that children of different races can be educated together.
Many schools were in danger of closing because the children were bused out to other neighborhoods.
● busing [N-UNCOUNT]
The courts ordered busing to desegregate the schools.bus boy (bus boys)
[N-COUNT]
A bus boy is someone whose job is to set or clear tables in a restaurant. (AM)bus lane (bus lanes)
[N-COUNT]
A bus lane is a part of the road which is intended to be used only by buses.bus shel|ter (bus shelters)
[N-COUNT]
A bus shelter is a bus stop that has a roof and at least one open side.bus stop (bus stops)
[N-COUNT]
A bus stop is a place on a road where buses stop to let passengers on and off.school bus (school buses)
[N-COUNT]
A school bus is a special bus which takes children to and from school.trol|ley bus (trolley buses)
[N-COUNT] also by N
A trolley bus is a bus that is driven by electric power taken from cables above the street.