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Bunt   /bənt/   Listen
Bunt

noun
1.
(baseball) the act of hitting a baseball lightly without swinging the bat.
2.
Disease of wheat characterized by replacement of the grains with greasy masses of smelly smut spores.  Synonym: stinking smut.
3.
Similar to Tilletia caries.  Synonyms: stinking smut, Tilletia foetida.
4.
Fungus that destroys kernels of wheat by replacing them with greasy masses of smelly spores.  Synonym: Tilletia caries.



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"Bunt" Quotes from Famous Books



... the wind blew much at Northeast, so that we could beare but onely a bunt of our foresaile, and the Barkes were not able to cary any sayle ...
— The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques, and Discoveries of The English Nation, Vol. XII., America, Part I. • Richard Hakluyt

... the other ships of the squadron, which had hitherto kept us company, notwithstanding the violence of the preceding storms. Neither was this our sole misfortune, for next morning, while endeavouring to hand the top-sails, the clew-lines and bunt-lines broke, and the sheets being half flown, every seam in the top-sails was soon split from top to bottom. The main top-sail shook so violently in the wind, that it carried away the top lanthorn, and even endangered the head of ...
— A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels, Volume 11 • Robert Kerr

... being very rainy, by coach with Sir W. Pen and my wife to Whitehall, and sent her to Mrs. Bunt's, and he and I to Mr. Coventry's about business, and so sent for her again, and all three home again, only I to the Mitre (Mr. Rawlinson's), where Mr. Pierce, the Purser, had got us a most brave chine of beef, and a dish of ...
— Diary of Samuel Pepys, Complete • Samuel Pepys

... hit" when the score is close and a player comes to the bat, and, although he would like to make a run, nevertheless, for the sake of the man on the base, he makes a "bunt," so that, while the pitcher or shortstop runs up to get the ball and put him out on first base, the man on the bases ...
— Fifty-Two Story Talks To Boys And Girls • Howard J. Chidley

... seven rope yarns plaited into seizings for bends in hawsers, mooring chains, and ropes. Sometimes the mate was a person of artistic taste, and in that case they would be given bucket strops or man ropes to graft, or turkheads and grafting to work on to some deck arrangement or yardarm, and bunt gaskets to work with marline. Indeed, the course of training was so systematic and so perfect that these young fellows long before their time had expired could do anything that a sailor might be called upon to do. To be taunted with laziness ...
— The Shellback's Progress - In the Nineteenth Century • Walter Runciman

... the woods, or the country. By this we mean shop-girls, clerks in banks, lawyer's clerks, young artists, and physicians, all, in fact, who make their bread by the sweat of their brows. As for the privileged classes, they go from London to their estates, put on plain clothes, and fish or bunt, or the ladies go into the woods to pick wild-flowers. The real love of nature, which is so honorable a part of the English character, breaks out in great and small. In America a holiday is a day when people dress in their best, and either walk the streets of a great city, or else take drives, ...
— Manners and Social Usages • Mrs. John M. E. W. Sherwood

... leg to kick, To frisk upon his features with my feet, Or bunt him in the stomach till he's sick— ...
— Cap and Gown - A Treasury of College Verse • Selected by Frederic Knowles

... was vanished, fires grown cold with the end of the day's work. But upriver and down the spoil of axe and saw lay in red booms along the bunk. He could mark the place where he had stood that afternoon and watched a puffing yarder bunt a string of forty-foot logs into the booming-ground. He could see figures about in the gardens, and the shrill voices and laughter of children echoed up to them ...
— Burned Bridges • Bertrand W. Sinclair

... kind that comes when harm is done to little folk we love. For she had climbed the ladder many a time, and had rested her head against the top while she watched Eve and Petro push the pellets of mud from their mouths with their tongues and bunt the wall of their clay nest smooth on the inside with the top of their closed beaks, not stopping even though they brushed their pretty chestnut-colored cheeks against the sticky mud, or got specks on the feathers of their dainty foreheads that bore a mark shaped like a pale new moon. And she had ...
— Bird Stories • Edith M. Patch

... down with a push, or, as they said, 'What do these feeble Jews? Will they fortify themselves? Will they sacrifice? Will they make an end in a day? Will they revive the stones out of the heaps of the rubbish which are bunt?' Alas! 'if a fox go up he shall even break down their stone wall' ...
— The Works of John Bunyan • John Bunyan



Words linked to "Bunt" :   baseball game, hitting, smut fungus, genus Tilletia, Tilletia, striking, headbutt, baseball, hit, strike, smut



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