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Bunt   /bənt/   Listen
noun
Bunt  n.  (Bot.) A fungus (Ustilago foetida) which affects the ear of cereals, filling the grains with a fetid dust; also called pepperbrand.



Bunt  n.  (Naut.) The middle part, cavity, or belly of a sail; the part of a furled sail which is at the center of the yard.



Bunt  n.  A push or shove; a butt; specif. (Baseball), The act of bunting the ball.



verb
Bunt  v. t. & v. i.  
1.
To strike or push with the horns or head; to butt; as, the ram bunted the boy.
2.
(Baseball) To bat or tap (the ball) slowly within the infield by meeting it with the bat without swinging at it.



Bunt  v. i.  (Naut.) To swell out; as, the sail bunts.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Bunt" Quotes from Famous Books



... came on a squall with rain, which almost blinded us; the sail was taken in very neatly, the clew-lines, chock-a-block, bunt-lines and leech-lines well up, reef-tackles overhauled, rolling-tackles taut, and all as it should be. The men lied out on the yard, the squall wore worse and worse, but they were handing in the leech of the sail, when snap went one bunt-line, then the other; the ...
— Jacob Faithful • Captain Frederick Marryat

... purpose; we had no chance on a bowline, and when our amigo had satisfied himself of his superiority by one or two short tacks, he deliberately hauled down his flying jib and gaff—topsail, took a reef in his mainsail, triced up the bunt of his foresail, and fired his long thirty—two at us. The shot came in at the third aftermost port on the starboard side, and dismounted the carronade, smashing the slide, and wounding three men. The second shot missed, and as it was madness to remain to be peppered, probably ...
— Tom Cringle's Log • Michael Scott

... the lookout from his post of observation in the main-top, where he had stopped a moment on catching sight of the object floating in the water ahead of the vessel, as he was coming down from aloft after restowing the bunt of the main-topgallantsail that had ...
— Picked up at Sea - The Gold Miners of Minturne Creek • J.C. Hutcheson

... the torches blinds them to their situation, and they would scarcely escape if they could. One side of the net is taken up on the schooner's deck, and there clamped firmly, the fish thus lying in the bunt, or pocket between the schooners, and the two boats which lie off eight or ten feet, rising and falling with the sea. There, huddled together in the shallow water, growing ever shallower as the net is raised, the shining fish, hundreds and thousands of them, bushels, barrels, hogsheads of ...
— American Merchant Ships and Sailors • Willis J. Abbot

... It was one o'clock in the morning, and the men on the night shift were taking their midnight spell off. Bunt was back at his old occupation of miner, and I—the one loafer of all that little world of workers—had brought him a bottle of beer to go with the "chaw"; for Bunt and I ...
— A Deal in Wheat - And Other Stories of the New and Old West • Frank Norris


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