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A Writer's Dictionary:

bugging Definition


Dictionary Home » Words Starting with B » budged ... bull's-eye » bugging


bug1
noun
    1. The common name for any of thousands of insects with a flattened oval body and mouthparts modified to form a beak for piercing and sucking, eg aphids.
      Thesaurus: insect, beetle, vermin, gnat, pest.
    2. An insect living in dirty houses, etc and thought of as dirty.
    (N Amer)
    3. A popular name for any kind of insect.
    4. colloq
      A popular name for a bacterium or virus that causes infection or illness.
      Example: a nasty stomach bug
      Thesaurus: microorganism, bacillus, germ, virus, microbe; disease, illness, malady, sickness.
    5. colloq
      A small hidden microphone.
    6. colloq
      A small fault in a machine or computer program which stops it from working properly.
      Thesaurus: flaw, defect, fault, imperfection, blemish, virus.
    7. colloq
      An obsession or craze.
      Example: She caught the skiing bug
verb bugged, bugging
    1. colloq
      To hide a microphone in (a room, telephone, etc) so as to be able to listen in to any conversations carried on there.
      Thesaurus: spy on, overhear, wiretap, tap, eavesdrop, listen in on.
    2. slang
      To annoy or worry someone.
      Thesaurus: annoy, irritate, plague, pester, bother, harass, disturb, get on one's case (US slang).
    (US)
    3. colloq
      Said of the eyes: to bulge or pop out (like the eyes of certain insects).
Etymology: 17c: perhaps connected with Anglo-Saxon budda a beetle.





bug2
verb
    (chiefly US)
    intr
    bugged, bugging
    1. colloq
      To leave or retreat quickly, especially in a panic.
      Form: bug out (usually)
      Form: bug off
Etymology: 1950s.



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