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bust2

Syllabification: (bust)
Pronunciation: /bəst/

informal
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Definition of bust

verb (past and past participle busted or bust)

[with object]
  • 1break, split, or burst (something):they bust the tunnel wide open figurativethe film busts every box-office record
  • [no object] come apart or split open:he was laughing fit to bust
  • cause to collapse; defeat utterly:he promised to bust the mafia
  • [no object] (bust up) (especially of a married couple) separate, typically after a quarrel.
  • (bust something up) cause (something) to break up:men hired to bust up union rallies
  • strike violently:they wanted to bust me on the mouth
  • [no object] (bust out) break out; escape:she busted out of prison
  • [no object] (in blackjack and similar card games) exceed the score of 21, losing one’s stake.
  • 2raid or search (premises where illegal activity is suspected):their house got busted
  • arrest:he was busted for drugs
  • (be/get busted) be caught in the act of doing something wrong:I sneaked up on them and told them they were busted
  • reduce (a soldier) to a lower rank; demote:he was busted to private

noun

  • 1a period of economic difficulty or depression:the boom was followed by the present bust
  • 2a raid or arrest by the police:a drug bust
  • 3a worthless thing:as a show it was a bust

adjective

  • bankrupt:firms will go bust

Origin:

mid 18th century (originally as a noun in the sense 'an act of bursting or splitting'): variant of burst

bust in other Oxford dictionaries

Definition of bust in the British & World English dictionary