/ˈbʌ.ɡi/
- A small horse-drawn cart.
“I had occasion […] to make a somewhat long business trip to Chicago, and on my return […] I found Farrar awaiting me in the railway station. He smiled his wonted fraction by way of greeting, […], and ”
- A small motor vehicle, such as a dune buggy.
“I casually let this information drop as our concierge drives us through the resort in a buggy, a frangipani flower tucked behind his ear. He promises to fix the bug problem and drops us off at the lob”
- A hearse.
“1920's arr: Jimmie Rogers Frankie and Johnnie
Bring out the rubber tired buggy/Bring out the rubber tired hack/I'm takin' my Johnny to the graveyard/But I ain't gonna bring him back”
- Pennsylvania, UK, WesternA pushchair; a stroller.
“The wider station upgrade has provided lifts to the Piccadilly and Victoria lines, as well as Network Rail platforms, to make it easier for passengers with mobility needs, buggies or heavy luggage to ”
- Canada, Pennsylvania, Southern-US, WesternA shopping cart or trolley.
- Infested with insects.
- Containing programming errors.
“This software is so buggy that I don't know how anyone can use it!”
- Resembling an insect.
- slangCrazy; bughouse.
“You have to help me get out of here. They want to keep me longer, but I can't stay. This place is driving me buggy.”
“Posting the selfies on Instagram, where limbs are noodly or eyes are buggy, is meant to be silly, making it seem like the photographers take themselves — and social media — less seriously.”
Formsbuggies(plural) · buggier(comparative) · buggiest(superlative)