Synonym: binge, bout, break, broke, burst, fall apart, female chest, fizzle, flop, raid, rupture, skint, snap, stone-broke, stony-broke, tear, wear, wear out. Similar words: busted, robust, bustle, bustling, robustly, combustion, robustness, filibuster. Meaning: [bʌst] n. 1. a complete failure 2. the chest of a woman 3. a sculpture of the head and shoulders of a person 4. an occasion for excessive eating or drinking. v. 1. ruin completely 2. search without warning, make a sudden surprise attack on 3. separate or cause to separate abruptly 4. go to pieces 5. break open or apart suddenly and forcefully. adj. lacking funds.
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61. Bank lending to the property market dried up, some property firms have gone bust and land prices have begun to slip.
62. I can't carry all the shopping home in this bag - it's bust.
63. In the intermediate zone between a population boom and a population bust, this superfluous genetic material is pruned out.
64. Perennial boom and bust cycles have always winnowed out weak farmers.
65. So the bizzies come round here and bust me for possession.
66. She put her wimple on the bust of Newman and developed a taste for pants suits.
67. There is even a suggestion of official encouragement to depositors to use the Manx bank shortly before it went bust.
68. There's no point in trying to mend it, it's completely bust.
69. Unfortunately,(sentencedict.com) both clubs went bust just as we were starting to draw a decent audience!
70. Last year they faced uncertainty over their jobs when the Lewis's group went bust and called in the receivers.
71. She said Gloria was always trying to bust up their conversations.
72. Another showed her on top of a mantelpiece with Lord Byron's bust tucked cosily between her legs.
73. At least two stations went bust, and others, such as Invicta Radio in Kent, had to relaunch before getting firmly established.
74. Philadelphia has been on the brink of going bust for months.
75. Their first meeting, in March 1966, was a bust for King.
76. Now London was a glorious bust and overdue for consolidation,[http://sentencedict.com/bust.html] at an estimated loss of a hundred million dollars.
77. The bust was mutilated in late antiquity, probably by Christians who carved a cross in the forehead.
78. High bookcases lined the library walls and stood between the windows, each topped with a marble bust.
79. There was a bust of Miguel de Unamuno at the bottom of the staircase, and it seemed to have been defaced.
80. Many hard working people have lost their homes because they have lost their jobs or because their businesses have gone bust.
81. The nose is mutilated; the bust was apparently deliberately buried in late antiquity with a companion piece of slightly later date.
82. On a small round table, polished for him by Dadda, was a bust of Tace.
83. School drug bust: Boy had cough drops Belle, W.. Va.
84. But with Auerbach the premise of the bust as substitution for the complete human form seems untenable.
85. There was a bust of Marx in the local cemetery and a bust of Freud outside the swimming baths.
86. But when the Thatcher boom went bust Sugar's business declined with it - and so did Amstrad's market rating.
87. The ball hit him in the face and bust his glasses.
88. Now the process has reached crisis point: the organization is about to go bust.
89. Such models also have shoulder straps shaped to fit around the bust.
90. As a magic show, it was a bust but money kept changing hands.
More similar words: busted, robust, bustle, bustling, robustly, combustion, robustness, filibuster, combustible, blockbuster, incomplete combustion, bus, bush, buses, abuse, busy, bushed, bushel, busing, ambush, nimbus, incubus, busily, busboy, disabuse, omnibus, rhombus, busy bee, minibus, bus stop.