bug
61bug — I bug 1. bug sb., en, e, ene (del af kroppen) II bug 2. bug sb., gen, bugs, gene (fejl i it program) …
62bug — An insect belonging to the suborder Heteroptera. For organisms so called, see the specific term. assassin b. an insect of the family Reduviidae (order Hemiptera) that inflicts irritating, painful bites in animals and humans; related to the cone… …
63bug — ● ►en /b*g/ n. m. ►DEBUG Erreur dans un programme, dans la programmation ou le câblage d un composant électronique, entraînant des comportements étranges et rarement désirés du système. Voir bug du Pentium, caractéristique, Hubble, Pentium. Tout… …
64Bug — 1. vorderer Teil von Schiffen und Booten; 2. Flusse in Osteuropa a. Sudl. Bug (Ukrainischer Bug, ukrainisch Boh; im Altertum Hypanis), Fluss in Wolhynien, Ukraine, mundet nach 806 km in das Schwarze Meer. b. Westl. Bug, entspringt bei Lemberg,… …
65bug — I n A burglar alarm system. He was caught when he broke into a house that was bugged. 1920s II n A fanatic. Milton is the greatest baseball bug I ve ever known. 1840s III n A fault or defect. There is a bug somewhere in my software that no one… …
66bug — 1. noun 1) informal a stomach bug Syn: illness, disease, sickness, disorder, upset, ailment, infection, virus; Brit.; informal lurgy 2) bugs were crawling everywhere Syn …
67buğ — is. Su və ya başqa bir maye bərk qızdırıldığı zaman hasil olan damcı zərrələrindən ibarət qaz, ya duman; buxar. Qazandan buğ çıxır. – Qara sapılcanın tortalı köpüyündən acı buğ qalxırdı. S. R.. // Mayedən, yaxud nəm bir şeydən çıxan dumanabənzər… …
68Bug — noun a) the Bug River, flowing northwest 450 mi. between Belarus and Poland. b) the Bug River in the Ukraine, flowing 530 mi. to the Dnieper estuary. Syn: Buh …
69bug — n. A dog bred from a Boston terrier and a pug. Example Citations: When a male pug is bred to a female Boston terrier, the result is a bug, pugston, or mini boxer. They can be tan with black muzzles and can be brindle or black/white. Holly Norton …
70bug — [14] Originally, bug meant ‘something frightening’ – and in fact one of the earliest known uses of the word was for what we would now call a ‘scare crow’. It is one of a set of words (others are bogle and perhaps bugaboo) for alarming or annoying …