noun, verb, boned, bon⋅ing, adverb | 1. | Anatomy, Zoology.
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| 2. | such a structure from an edible animal, usually with meat adhering to it, as an article of food: Pea soup should be made with a ham bone. |
| 3. | any of various similarly hard or structural animal substances, as ivory or whalebone. |
| 4. | something made of or resembling such a substance. |
| 5. | a small concession, intended to pacify or quiet; a conciliatory bribe or gift: The administration threw the student protesters a couple of bones, but refused to make any basic changes in the curriculum or requirements. |
| 6. | bones,
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| 7. | the color of bone; ivory or off-white. |
| 8. | a flat strip of whalebone or other material for stiffening corsets, petticoats, etc.; stay. |
| 9. | Games Slang. a domino. |
| 10. | to remove the bones from: to bone a turkey. |
| 11. | to put whalebone or another stiffener into (clothing). |
| 12. | Agriculture. to put bone meal into (feed, fertilizer, etc.). |
| 13. | completely; absolutely: bone tired. |
| 14. | bone up, Informal. to study intensely; cram: We're going to have to bone up for the exam. |
| 15. | feel in one's bones, to think or feel intuitively: She felt in her bones that it was going to be a momentous day. |
| 16. | have a bone to pick with someone, to have cause to disagree or argue with someone: The teacher had a bone to pick with him because his homework paper was identical with his neighbor's. |
| 17. | make no bones about,
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| 18. | to the bone,
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bone (bōn)
n.
The dense, semirigid, porous, calcified connective tissue forming the major portion of the skeleton of most vertebrates, consisting of a dense organic matrix and an inorganic, mineral component.
Any of the more than 200 anatomically distinct structures making up the human skeleton.
A piece of bone.
bone (bōn) Pronunciation Key
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make no bones about
Act or speak frankly about something, without hesitation or evasion. For example, Tom made no bones about wanting to be promoted, or Make no bones about it
she's very talented. Versions of this expression date back to the mid-1400s and the precise allusion is no longer known. Some believe it meant a boneless stew or soup that one could eat without hesitation; others relate it to dice, originally made from bones, that were thrown without hesitation or fuss.