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View synonyms for bust

bust

1

[ buhst ]

noun

  1. a sculptured, painted, drawn, or engraved representation of the upper part of the human figure, especially a portrait sculpture showing only the head and shoulders of the subject.
  2. the chest or breast, especially a woman's bosom.


bust

2

[ buhst ]

verb (used without object)

  1. Informal.
    1. to burst.
    2. to go bankrupt.
    3. to collapse from the strain of making a supreme effort:

      She was determined to make straight A's or bust.

  2. Cards.
    1. Draw Poker. to fail to make a flush or straight by one card.
    2. Blackjack. to draw cards exceeding the count of 21.

verb (used with object)

  1. Informal.
    1. to burst.
    2. to bankrupt; ruin financially.
  2. to demote, especially in military rank or grade:

    He was busted from sergeant to private three times.

  3. to tame; break:

    to bust a bronco.

  4. Slang.
    1. to place under arrest:

      The gang was busted and put away on narcotics charges.

    2. to subject to a police raid:

      The bar has been busted three times for selling drinks to minors.

  5. Informal.
    1. to hit.
    2. to break; fracture:

      She fell and busted her arm.

noun

  1. a failure.
  2. Informal. a hit; sock; punch:

    He got a bust in the nose before he could put up his hands.

  3. a sudden decline in the economic conditions of a country, marked by an extreme drop in stock-market prices, business activity, and employment; depression.
  4. Slang.
    1. an arrest.
    2. a police raid.
  5. Informal. a drinking spree; binge.
  6. Cards.
    1. a very weak hand.
    2. Bridge. a hand lacking the potential to take a single trick.

adjective

  1. Informal. bankrupt; broke.

verb phrase

  1. Informal.
    1. to break up; separate:

      Sam and his wife busted up a year ago.

    2. to damage or destroy:

      Soldiers got in a fight and busted up the bar.

bust

1

/ bʌst /

noun

  1. the chest of a human being, esp a woman's bosom
  2. a sculpture of the head, shoulders, and upper chest of a person


bust

2

/ bʌst /

verb

  1. to burst or break
  2. to make or become bankrupt
  3. tr (of the police) to raid, search, or arrest

    the girl was busted for drugs

  4. tr to demote, esp in military rank
  5. tr to break or tame (a horse, etc)
  6. tr to punch; hit
  7. See gut
    bust a gut
    bust a gut See gut

noun

  1. a raid, search, or arrest by the police
  2. a punch; hit
  3. a failure, esp a financial one; bankruptcy
  4. a drunken party

adjective

  1. broken
  2. bankrupt
  3. go bust
    go bust to become bankrupt

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Word History and Origins

Origin of bust1

First recorded in 1640–50; from French buste, from Italian busto, probably from Latin bustum “funeral pyre, ashes, grave mound, tomb,” presumably by association with the busts erected over graves

Origin of bust2

First recorded in 1755–65; variant of burst, by loss of r before s, as in ass 2, bass 2, passel, etc.

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Word History and Origins

Origin of bust1

C17: from French buste , from Italian busto a sculpture, of unknown origin

Origin of bust2

C19: from a dialect pronunciation of burst

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Idioms and Phrases

Idioms
  1. bust ass, Slang: Vulgar. to fight with the fists; strike or thrash another.
  2. bust on, Slang.
    1. to attack physically; beat up.
    2. to criticize or reprimand harshly.
    3. to make fun of or laugh at; mock.
    4. to inform on.
  3. bust one's ass, Slang: Vulgar. to make an extreme effort; exert oneself.

More idioms and phrases containing bust

  • break (bust) one's ass
  • go broke (bust)

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Example Sentences

The dotcom bust, which followed Apple’s second-ever stock split in June 2000, wrecked investors’ returns.

From Fortune

Hormones could very well be making booms and busts worse than they need be.

From Quartz

I don’t want to be doomsday, but it is bleak right now, so we have to think about outdoor recreation as another economic specialization that’s vulnerable to boom-and-bust and think about long-term diversification.

In the past, a bust brought calls for economic diversification.

From Fortune

Although the 30-minute-rule to getting engagement has been busted, it definitely helps to know your best posting time and post consistently.

Nobody ever says they want to become a cop so they can bust people for urinating in public or drinking alcohol on their stoop.

Before this latest brush with the law, the rapper was facing pot-bust and unrelated gun charges.

Because Wright was a no-show in criminal court to face the loud music and pot bust he already had an outstanding warrant.

And every day, we bust our asses to continue “making it,” but we most certainly have not “made it.”

People believe that the financial sector has been allowed to return to its pre-bust excesses.

The back of her head will be quite in line with her charming little bust, and I for one shall walk round and laugh in her face.

Among these are "Medusa," a bronze bust; and a "Mater Dolorosa," in terra-cotta.

It was destroyed in the fire, but has been replaced, and few could tell the present bust is not the original one.

A neat little monument, with a marble bust, is erected to the memory of the founder.

The only sure thing about most of those schemes is the certainty of 'going bust' and losing every penny you have in the world.

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Related Words

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More About Bust

What does or bust mean?

The phrase or bust is used when someone is pursuing an end no matter what, even if they fail trying. Saying New York City or bust, for example, means someone is doing absolutely everything to go there.

How is or bust pronounced?

[ awr buhst ]

Where does or bust come from?

The phrase or bust may be associated with hitchhikers who’d write it on the signs they’d hold on the side of the highway while waiting for someone to offer them a ride (e.g., Vegas or bust), but the expression was apparently first popularized in the Colorado gold rush of the mid-1800s.

Following the discovery of gold in what is now Englewood, Colorado, people with little or nothing to lose began heading to an area of the state known as Pike’s Peak Country hoping to strike it rich. Around the 1850–60s, some of these dreamers began using the phrase Pike’s Peak or bust as they boarded up their homes and headed west through unforgiving weather and terrain—all for that sweet, sweet gold.

These gold-seekers didn’t invent the phrase, though. It’s recorded as early as the 1830s. Bust itself is a variant of burst, and or bust implies that one will violently break down or fall to pieces before giving up on their goal.

During the 2016 Democratic primaries, some die-hard supporters of the progressive Democratic candidate Bernie Sanders started an effort called Bernie or Bust. Some of these people pledged that they would not vote for Hillary Clinton if she won the Democratic nomination. Instead, they would write in Sanders, vote for a third-party candidate, or not vote.

How is or bust used in real life?

The phrase or bust follows the object of one’s ambition, such as a location or accomplishment (e.g., Austin or bust or 4.0 GPA or bust).

Or bust is often still used in the context of a trip, especially road trips. Nowadays it’s mostly used for enthusiasm and not meant to suggest that not arriving at the intended location is an actual possibility.

The phrase is also often used outside the realm of travel, and is meant to suggest that there is only one option and way forward, that anything else is defeat or failure (e.g., Our team is going to the Super Bowl or bust).

More examples of or bust:

“It’s win or bust for both Donegal and Roscommon at The Hyde after their opening Super Eights defeats and Bonner was making sure he had his troops rallied ahead of the long trip home to the north-west.”

—Michael Scully, Irish Mirror, July 2018

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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023

Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.

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