<span class="searchmatch">Kent</span> <span class="searchmatch">bugle</span> (plural <span class="searchmatch">Kent</span> <span class="searchmatch">bugles</span>) (music) A curved <span class="searchmatch">bugle</span> with six stops....
<span class="searchmatch">Kent</span> <span class="searchmatch">bugles</span> plural of <span class="searchmatch">Kent</span> <span class="searchmatch">bugle</span>...
of a "<span class="searchmatch">bugle</span>" or wild ox <span class="searchmatch">bugle</span>-player <span class="searchmatch">bugle</span> player <span class="searchmatch">bugler</span> <span class="searchmatch">bugle</span> scale buglet contrabass <span class="searchmatch">bugle</span> <span class="searchmatch">Kent</span> <span class="searchmatch">bugle</span> key-<span class="searchmatch">bugle</span> keyed <span class="searchmatch">bugle</span> → French: <span class="searchmatch">bugle</span> music:...
finally improving his powers of endurance by a little practising of the <span class="searchmatch">Kent</span> <span class="searchmatch">bugle</span>. He at length became a perfect melomaniac, and was always in danger of...
scaur. scar (plural scars) A cliff or rock outcrop. 1847, Tennyson, “The <span class="searchmatch">Bugle</span> Song”, in The Princess: O hark, O hear! how thin and clear, / And thinner...
and under the opposite arm), which was formerly used to hold a sword, a <span class="searchmatch">bugle</span>, etc., and is now chiefly worn for ceremonial purposes; also (loosely),...
knew, / If a sail but gleam'd white 'gainst the welkin blue, / Trumpet and <span class="searchmatch">bugle</span> to arms did call, / Burghers hasten'd to man the wall, […] 1822, [Walter...
the skiff of ice on the beaver ponds in the morning. Elk could be heard <span class="searchmatch">bugling</span> up and down the valley […] 2004, Orson Scott Card, The Crystal City: The...
1955: CAP. XXXI. of Germanie, and the wonderfull byrdes therein, and of the <span class="searchmatch">Bugles</span>, Vres, and Alces. wylde Beaſtes. […] There is alſo a beaſt called Alce much...
another 'free pass' all round, and a hobnob perhaps with Signor, Senora, Herr <span class="searchmatch">Bugle</span>, Madame, or Madamoiselle. informal chat hobnob (third-person singular simple...