June 21, 2006, 21:07
KallehBust
I wrote this limerick for OEDILF:
My mom says I shouldn't say bust
As past tense of break...that I must
Say broke or it's broken.
(Though sometimes when jokin'
I'll talk of big busts with such lust!)
Obviously it is a boy talking, and not I.
Anyway, the question has come up as to whether
bust used this way is a slang use or not. I read it that way in the online AHD, but an OEDILFer says that M-W only identifies a slang of
bust as being an
arrest. Who is right?
June 22, 2006, 02:27
Richard EnglishAlthough it's rather a casual use, in the UK we'd certainly recognise the word's use as meaning "broken".
June 22, 2006, 06:34
arnieAre you querying whether the use of
bust in this way is slang or not? M-W online gives for the verb:
quote:
a : to break or smash especially with force; also : to make inoperative <busted my watch> b : to bring an end to : BREAK
So, it is definitely in the dictionary, although they, unlike others, don't appear to mark it specifically as slang.
June 22, 2006, 07:01
zmježd Bust in this sense is from a dialectal pronunciation of
burst; cf.
cuss and
hoss.
June 22, 2006, 20:02
KallehI looked it up in Dictonary.com, and here is the AHD
entry.That surely indicates that it is slang. Am I wrong then? Or is it debatable (that's the perfect situation for the correct use of "moot.")?