sh]
| 1. | a low plant with many branches that arise from or near the ground. |
| 2. | a small cluster of shrubs appearing as a single plant. |
| 3. | something resembling or suggesting this, as a thick, shaggy head of hair. |
| 4. | Also called bush lot. Canadian. a small, wooded lot, esp. a farm lot with trees left standing to provide firewood, fence posts, etc. |
| 5. | the tail of a fox; brush. |
| 6. | Geography. a stretch of uncultivated land covered with mixed plant growth, bushy vegetation, trees, etc. |
| 7. | a large uncleared area thickly covered with mixed plant growth, trees, etc., as a jungle. |
| 8. | a large, sparsely populated area most of which is uncleared, as areas of Australia and Alaska. |
| 9. | a tree branch hung as a sign before a tavern or vintner's shop. |
| 10. | any tavern sign. |
| 11. | Slang: Vulgar. pubic hair. |
| 12. | Archaic. a wineshop. |
| 13. | to be or become bushy; branch or spread as or like a bush. |
| 14. | to cover, protect, support, or mark with a bush or bushes. |
| 15. | bush-league. |
| 16. | beat around or about the bush, to avoid coming to the point; delay in approaching a subject directly: Stop beating around the bush and tell me what you want. |
| 17. | beat the bushes, to scout or search for persons or things far and wide: beating the bushes for engineers. |
| 18. | go bush, Australian.
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beat (bēt) v. beat, beat·en (bēt'n) or beat, beat·ing, beats v. tr.
beat off
Idiom(s): beat allTo be impressive or amazing. Often used in negative conditional constructions: If that doesn't beat all! Idiom(s): beat a retreatTo make a hasty withdrawal. Idiom(s): beat around/about the bushTo fail to confront a subject directly. Idiom(s): beat it Slang To leave hurriedly. Idiom(s): beat the bushesTo make an exhaustive search. Idiom(s): beat the drum/drumsTo give enthusiastic public support or promotion: a politician who beats the drum for liberalism. Idiom(s): beat up on
Idiom(s): to beat the bandTo an extreme degree. [Middle English beten, from Old English bēaten; see bhau- in Indo-European roots.] Synonyms: These verbs mean to hit heavily and repeatedly with violent blows: was mugged and beaten; basted him with a stick; was battered in the boxing ring; rioting students belabored by police officers; buffeted him with her open palm; hammered the opponent with his fists; lambasted every challenger; troops pounded with mortar fire; pummeled the bully soundly; thrashed the thief for stealing the candy. See Also Synonyms at defeat. |
beat around the bush
Also, beat about the bush. Approach indirectly, in a roundabout way, or too cautiously. For example, Stop beating around the bush
get to the point. This term, first recorded in 1572, originally may have alluded to beating the bushes for game.