busful
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]busful (plural busfuls or busesful)
- An amount sufficient to fill a bus.
- 1946 April 7, “Campus Capers”, in The Nashville Tennessean, volume 39, number 326, Nashville, Tenn., page 9-B:
- The trip was made Friday in two bouncing busesful, under the chaperonage and direction of Mr. CYRUS DANIEL.
- 1953 October 23, “Angry Miners Threaten To ‘Down’ The Government”, in Glamorgan Advertiser, volume 33, number 1760, page 5:
- Among the 50,000 were busesful from Coegnant, Caerau and Cwmdu Collieries in Maesteg and delegates from pits in the Afan and Garw Valleys.
- 1966 March, Thomas Pynchon, The Crying of Lot 49, New York, N.Y.: Bantam Books, published November 1976, →ISBN, page 89:
- Riding among an exhausted busful of Negroes going on to graveyard shifts all over the city, […]
- 1982, Libby Purves, Britain at Play[1], Robson Books, →ISBN, page 92:
- We had dissolved, busesful of us, to the beach and the hypermarket, to the Boutique Diana, le Royal Baby, the Hotel Folkestone or the Café l’Hovercraft.
- 2013, Serge Quadruppani, The Sudden Disappearance of Worker Bees, Arcade Publishing (2013; original French novel published 2011), →ISBN, unnumbered page:
- Due to the arrival of a busful of Bavarian tourists, the noise in the hotel lobby was deafening.
Related terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]amount sufficient to fill a bus
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