- Definition von a-bush im Englisch Englisch wörterbuch
- a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush
- It is preferable to have a small but certain advantage than a mere potential of a greater one 
- ale-bush
- a tavern sign The place was really no more than a cottage, wattle-daubed walls and a thatched roof with an ale bush pushed under the eaves. 
 
- beat about the bush
- Alternative form of beat around the bush 
- beat around the bush
- To treat a topic, but omit its main points, often intentionally 
- beat around the bush
- To delay or avoid talking about something difficult or unpleasant Please stop beating around the bush and tell me what the problem is!. 
 
- beaten around the bush
- Simple past tense and past participle of beat around the bush 
- beating around the bush
- Present participle of beat around the bush 
- beats around the bush
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of beat around the bush 
- bush
- The Australian use of the noun "bush", used attributively The bush vote; bush tucker; bush aristocracy. 
 
- bush
- Amateurish behavior, short for "bush league behavior" The way that pitcher showed up the batter after the strikeout was bush. 
 
- bush
- Not skilled; not professional; not major league They're supposed to be a major league team, but so far they've been bush. 
 
- bush
- An area of New Zealand covered in forest, especially native forest 
- bush
- The pubic hair, especially that of a woman; hence, vulva 
- bush
- A thick washer or hollow cylinder of metal (also bushing) 
- bush
- A mechanical attachment, usually a metallic socket with a screw thread, such as the mechanism by which a camera is attached to a tripod stand 
- bush
- A horticultural rather than strictly botanical category of woody plant that is distinguished from a tree by its multiple stems and lower height; usually less than six metres tall 
- bush
- : A tavern or wine merchant 
- bush
- Towards the direction of the outback On hatching, the chicks scramble to the surface and head bush on their own. 
 
- bush
- The remote forested areas of Canada, excluding the high arctic barrens. The upcountry 
- bush
- The countryside area of Australia that is neither arid nor remote enough to constitute the outback, and may include areas of natural flora even within conurbations 
- bush antelopes
- plural form of bush antelope 
- bush babies
- plural form of bush baby 
- bush baptist
- A fictitious religion, said as a reply when one does not want to divulge their true religion, if any. A member of that 'religion' I asked Jim what religion he was, and he replied bush baptist. 
 
- bush dog
- A wild canine animal, Speothos venaticus, found in Central America 
- bush fire
- A fire, often large, that consumes a woodland Australia has always been prone to bush fires due to its woody landscape. 
 
- bush frog
- sedge frog 
- bush hammer
- A square-headed hammer with spikes used in stoneworking to either even the surface before polishing, or give it a pockmarked and weathered aspect 
- bush hammers
- plural form of bush hammer 
- bush kanaka
- Alternative spelling of bus kanaka 
- bush league
- A professional sports association at the lower levels of minor league organization 
- bush league
- Amateurish 
- bush league
- A low-ranking or inferior level among groups, professions, organizations, etc 
- bush league
- Having inferior quality 
- bush pig
- A South African pig, Potamochoerus porcus, having tufts of hair on its face 
- bush pig
- An unattractive looking woman I'll cut the boring intro as to how I ended up showing the glorious sites of Brisbane to these three fat, ugly bush pigs.''. 
 
- bush pilot
- A pilot who flies small aircraft to and from remote locations, over expanses of relatively unpopulated territory Last month, landed by a bush pilot on a glacier at 7,000 ft., the four began their long push—the kind of adventure that pales a plains dweller. 
 
- bush plane
- A light, propeller-driven aircraft, with a high wing, designed to land on, and take off from grass airstrips or rough ground 
- bush telegraph
- A gossip network I suppose you've received information, by bush-telegraph, that that third assistant understrapper and ex-sailorman at Tulagi is going to deport me as an undesirable immigrant. 
 
- bush telegraph
- A system used by undeveloped societies in remote regions for communication over long distances, such as drum sounds, word-of-mouth relay, or smoke signals When I was born, family and friends came from all over, thanks to the bush telegraph. There were very few telephones where I grew up, so my father mentioned my birth to someone at the market. And that woman told a man who was delivering rice to a place up the road. He told someone there, who was taking a herd of cattle south, toward the villages. And pretty soon the news of my birth had spread far and wide. 
 
- bush telegraphs
- plural form of bush telegraph 
- bush tucker
- Traditional Aboriginal food (tucker) gathered or hunted in bushland 
- bush week
- An imaginary or symbolic time when simple people from the bush (ie. country areas) come to the city, likely to be preyed on by tricksters there. A question like What is this – bush week? is thus a protest by the speaker against some obvious prank or ruse. (Reference: Australian Broadcasting Commission News Radio article .) 
- bush-Kanaka
- Alternative spelling of bus kanaka 
- bush-dog
- Attributive form of bush dog, noun 
- bush-hen
- Some species of bird in the genus Amaurornis in the family Rallidae 
- bush-league
- Minor-league; second-rate 
- bush-telegraph
- Alternative spelling of bush telegraph 
- butterfly bush
- A buddleia, especially the species Buddleja davidii 
- find a friendly bush
- To urinate or defecate or to seek relative privacy for that purpose; to relieve oneself, particularly outdoors 
- juniper bush
- a bush, shrub, or smaller tree of any of the species within the genus Juniperus 
- sugar bush
- Forest dominated by sugar maples or other maples tapped for sugar 
- sugar bush
- An evergreen shrub found in south-western United States of America 
- bush
-  {v} to grow bushy, furnish with a bush
- bush
-  {n} a thick shrub, bough, tail of a fox, a cylender in a block
- a bird in the hand is worh two in the bush
-  (Atasözü) It's better to have a small actual advantage than the chance of a greater one
- a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush
-  (Atasözü) Something we have, or can easily get, is more valuable than something we want that we may not be able to get; we shouldn't risk losing something sure by trying to get something that is not sure Johnny has a job as a paperboy, but he wants a job in a gas station. His father says that a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush. 
 
- beat around the bush
-  (deyim) to avoid talking about what is important Quit beating around the bush and tell me what you really think about my idea. 
 
- beating around the bush
-  (deyim) talking about something indirectlyto talk about things indirectly, not stating exactly what you mean. - "Why don't you just come out and say what you want to say? Stop beating around the bush."to ask questions or hint at things without being clear about what you mean. - "If you want to ask me, just ask; don't beat around the bush."
- bush tucker
- Bushfood (referred to as bush tucker in Australia) traditionally relates to any food native to Australia and used as sustenance by the original inhabitants, the Australian Aborigines, but it is a reference to any native fauna/flora that is used for culinary and/or medicinal purposes regardless of which continent or culture it originates from. Examples of Australian native animal foods (meats) include kangaroo, emu and crocodile. In particular, kangaroo is quite common and can be found in many normal supermarkets at prices comparable to beef. Other animals, for example goanna and witchetty grubs, were eaten by Aboriginal Australians and thus qualify as bushfood in every sense of the word. Fish and shellfish are culinary features of the Australian coastal communities 
- red bush
-  (Botanik, Bitkibilim) South African shrub having flat acuminate leaves and yellow flowers; leaves are aromatic when dried and used to make an herbal tea; (synonym) Aspalathus linearis, Aspalathus cedcarbergensis
- Bush
-  {i} family name; George Walker Bush (born 1946), 43rd president of the United States (2001-), former governor of Texas, son of George Herbert Walker Bush; George Herbert Walker Bush (born 1924), 41st president of the United States (1989-1993)
- Bush
- A family name 
- Bush House
- the building in London from which the BBC World Service broadcasts radio programmes abroad 
- George Bush
- born June 12, 1924, Milton, Mass., U.S. 41st president of the U.S. (1989-93). Bush was the son of Prescott Bush, an investment banker and U.S. senator from Connecticut. He served in World War II as a torpedo bomber pilot on aircraft carriers in the Pacific, flying some 58 combat missions; he was shot down by the Japanese in 1944. After graduating from Yale University in 1948, he started an oil business in Texas. He was elected to a Republican seat in the U.S. House of Representatives (1966-70) and later served as ambassador to the UN (1971-72), chief of liaison to China (1974-76), and head of the CIA (1976-77). In 1980 he lost the Republican Party nomination for president to Ronald Reagan. Bush served as vice president under Reagan (1981-89), whom he succeeded as president, defeating Michael Dukakis. He made no dramatic departures from Reagan's policies. In 1989 he ordered a brief military invasion of Panama, which toppled that country's leader, Gen. Manuel Noriega. He helped impose a UN-approved embargo against Iraq in 1990 to force its withdrawal from Kuwait. When Iraq refused, he authorized a U.S.-led air offensive that began the Persian Gulf War. Despite general approval of his foreign policy, an economic recession led to his defeat by Bill Clinton in 1992. His son George W. Bush was elected governor of Texas in 1994 and president of the U.S. in 2000. Another son, Jeb Bush, was elected governor of Florida in 1998 
- George Bush
-  {i} George Herbert Walker Bush (born 1924), 41st president of the United States (1989-1993); George Walker Bush (born 1946), 43rd president of the United States (2001-), former governor of Texas and son of George Herbert Walker Bush
- George Herbert Bush
- the 41st President of the US (1989-93) (1924- ) 
- George Herbert Walker Bush
- born June 12, 1924, Milton, Mass., U.S. 41st president of the U.S. (1989-93). Bush was the son of Prescott Bush, an investment banker and U.S. senator from Connecticut. He served in World War II as a torpedo bomber pilot on aircraft carriers in the Pacific, flying some 58 combat missions; he was shot down by the Japanese in 1944. After graduating from Yale University in 1948, he started an oil business in Texas. He was elected to a Republican seat in the U.S. House of Representatives (1966-70) and later served as ambassador to the UN (1971-72), chief of liaison to China (1974-76), and head of the CIA (1976-77). In 1980 he lost the Republican Party nomination for president to Ronald Reagan. Bush served as vice president under Reagan (1981-89), whom he succeeded as president, defeating Michael Dukakis. He made no dramatic departures from Reagan's policies. In 1989 he ordered a brief military invasion of Panama, which toppled that country's leader, Gen. Manuel Noriega. He helped impose a UN-approved embargo against Iraq in 1990 to force its withdrawal from Kuwait. When Iraq refused, he authorized a U.S.-led air offensive that began the Persian Gulf War. Despite general approval of his foreign policy, an economic recession led to his defeat by Bill Clinton in 1992. His son George W. Bush was elected governor of Texas in 1994 and president of the U.S. in 2000. Another son, Jeb Bush, was elected governor of Florida in 1998 
- George Herbert Walker Bush
-  {i} (born 1924) 41st president of the United States (1989-1993), father of President George Walker Bush
- George W Bush
- born July 6, 1946, New Haven, Conn., U.S. Governor of Texas (1995-2000) and 43rd president of the U.S. (from 2001). The eldest child of George Bush, the 41st president of the U.S. (1989-93), George W. Bush attended Yale University and Harvard Business School. After spending a decade in the oil business with mixed success, he served as managing general partner of the Texas Rangers professional baseball franchise. In 1994 he was elected governor of Texas and won reelection by a landslide in 1998. In 2000 Bush captured the Republican Party presidential nomination. Despite losing the national popular vote to Al Gore by more than 500,000 votes, he gained the presidency when the U.S. Supreme Court reversed a recount order by the Florida Supreme Court, enabling him to secure a narrow majority in the electoral college (271-266). In June 2001 Bush signed into law a $1.35 trillion tax-cut bill. In foreign affairs, his administration refused to abide by the Kyoto Protocol on reducing the emission of gases responsible for the greenhouse effect, withdrew from the Treaty on the Limitation of Anti-Ballistic Missile Systems, and attempted to remove U.S. citizens from the jurisdiction of the new International Criminal Court. Following the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center in New York City and the Pentagon building near Washington, D.C., in September 2001 (see September 11 attacks), the Bush administration's main priorities shifted to domestic security and counterterrorism. Bush identified Osama bin Laden and his al-Qaeda network as responsible for the attacks. In October he launched a military campaign against Afghanistan's Taliban government, which harboured bin Laden; the invasion of the country routed al-Qaeda and forced the Taliban from power. In late 2002 Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair accused the Iraqi government of Saddm ussein of continuing to possess and develop biological, chemical, and nuclear weapons in violation of UN mandates. After failing to persuade France, Russia, and other UN Security Council members that those weapons would not be uncovered by UN weapons inspections, which had resumed in November, Bush and Blair led an attack on Iraq that toppled addm's regime in 2003. Though no such weapons were found, fighting continued and escalated, as the United States helped Iraq pave the way for democratic elections. Bush faced a strong challenge for the presidency in 2004 by Democratic Senator John Kerry but defeated him in a close contest 
- George W. Bush
-  {i} George Walker Bush (born 1946), 43rd president of the United States, former governor of Texas
- George W. Bush
- the 43rd President of the US (2000-). He is the son of the former President George Bush (1946-) 
- George Walker Bush
-  {i} (born 1946) 43rd president of the United States (2001-), former governor of Texas, son of George Herbert Walker Bush
- George Walker Bush
- born July 6, 1946, New Haven, Conn., U.S. Governor of Texas (1995-2000) and 43rd president of the U.S. (from 2001). The eldest child of George Bush, the 41st president of the U.S. (1989-93), George W. Bush attended Yale University and Harvard Business School. After spending a decade in the oil business with mixed success, he served as managing general partner of the Texas Rangers professional baseball franchise. In 1994 he was elected governor of Texas and won reelection by a landslide in 1998. In 2000 Bush captured the Republican Party presidential nomination. Despite losing the national popular vote to Al Gore by more than 500,000 votes, he gained the presidency when the U.S. Supreme Court reversed a recount order by the Florida Supreme Court, enabling him to secure a narrow majority in the electoral college (271-266). In June 2001 Bush signed into law a $1.35 trillion tax-cut bill. In foreign affairs, his administration refused to abide by the Kyoto Protocol on reducing the emission of gases responsible for the greenhouse effect, withdrew from the Treaty on the Limitation of Anti-Ballistic Missile Systems, and attempted to remove U.S. citizens from the jurisdiction of the new International Criminal Court. Following the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center in New York City and the Pentagon building near Washington, D.C., in September 2001 (see September 11 attacks), the Bush administration's main priorities shifted to domestic security and counterterrorism. Bush identified Osama bin Laden and his al-Qaeda network as responsible for the attacks. In October he launched a military campaign against Afghanistan's Taliban government, which harboured bin Laden; the invasion of the country routed al-Qaeda and forced the Taliban from power. In late 2002 Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair accused the Iraqi government of Saddm ussein of continuing to possess and develop biological, chemical, and nuclear weapons in violation of UN mandates. After failing to persuade France, Russia, and other UN Security Council members that those weapons would not be uncovered by UN weapons inspections, which had resumed in November, Bush and Blair led an attack on Iraq that toppled addm's regime in 2003. Though no such weapons were found, fighting continued and escalated, as the United States helped Iraq pave the way for democratic elections. Bush faced a strong challenge for the presidency in 2004 by Democratic Senator John Kerry but defeated him in a close contest 
- Jeb Bush
- Governor of the state of Florida (USA), one of the sons of former U.S. President George Bush 
- Vannevar Bush
- born March 11, 1890, Everett, Mass., U.S. died June 28, 1974, Belmont, Mass. U.S. electrical engineer and administrator. He taught principally at MIT (1919-38, 1955-71). In the late 1920s and '30s, Bush and his students built several electronic analog computers to solve differential equations. He helped found Raytheon Co., and he served as president of the Carnegie Institute (1939-55). In 1941 he became director of the U.S. Office of Scientific Research and Development, in which capacity he helped organize the Manhattan Project. By providing government support for university-based scientific research, the agency paved the way for postwar federal support of basic scientific research. As adviser to Pres. Franklin Roosevelt, he laid the groundwork for the establishment of the National Science Foundation (1950). An information retrieval and annotation system he described became the theoretical prototype of hypertext, the basis of the World Wide Web 
- a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush
- it's best to go with what you have for certain then to wait for something better that you might never get 
- beat about the bush
- tell something in a round-about manner, talk around a subject without getting to the main point 
- beat around the bush
- be deliberately ambiguous or unclear in order to mislead or withhold information 
- beat around the bush
- speak indirectly, avoid directly discussing the issue, talk in a roundabout way without addressing the problem 
- beauty bush
- Chinese deciduous shrub with yellow-throated pinkish flowers and bristly fruit; often cultivated as an ornamental 
- bird in the hand is worth two in the bush
- it's best to go with what you have for certain then to wait for something better that you might never get 
- bird's-eye bush
- shrub with narrow-elliptic glossy evergreen leaves and yellow flowers with leathery petaloid sepals 
- black-fronted bush shrike
- a kind of bush shrike 
- bramble bush
- The bramble, or a collection of brambles growing together 
- bramble bush
- any prickly shrub of the genus Rubus bearing edible aggregate fruits 
- burning bush
- bush described in the Book of Exodus which burned with fire but was not consumed 
- burning bush
- (Old Testament) the bush that burned without being consumed and from which God spoke to Moses 
- bush
- A piece of copper, screwed into a gun, through which the venthole is bored 
- bush
- a large wilderness area 
- bush
- open forest land 
- bush
- To furnish with a bush, or lining; as, to bush a pivot hole 
- bush
- A tavern or wine merchant 
- bush
- A low thick shrub without a distinct trunk 
- bush
- The pubic hair, especially that of a woman 
- bush
- A shrub or branch, properly, a branch of ivy (as sacred to Bacchus), hung out at vintners' doors, or as a tavern sign; hence, a tavern sign, and symbolically, the tavern itself 
- bush
- dense vegetation consisting of stunted trees or bushes 
- bush
- 43rd President of the United States; son of George Herbert Walker Bush (born in 1946) 
- bush
- A bush is a large plant which is smaller than a tree and has a lot of branches. Trees and bushes grew down to the water's edge. = shrub 
- bush
- If you tell someone not to beat about the bush, you mean that you want them to tell you something immediately and quickly, rather than in a complicated, indirect way. Stop beating about the bush. What's he done?. The 41st President of the United States (1989-1993). He was previously U.S. ambassador to the United Nations (1971-1972) and China (1974-1975), director of the Central Intelligence Agency (1976-1977), and Vice President (1981-1989) under Ronald Reagan. American electrical engineer and physicist who designed (1928) the differential analyzer, an early computer, and directed the World War II effort to develop the first atomic bomb. butterfly bush Bush George Herbert Walker Bush George Walker Bush Vannevar 
- bush
- A shrub; esp 
- bush
- not of the highest quality or sophistication 
- bush
- a shrub with branches rising from or near the root; a thick shrub or a cluster of shrubs 
- bush
- To set bushes for; to support with bushes; as, to bush peas 
- bush
- The parts of Alaska accessible only by boat or aircraft 
- bush
- A shrub cut off, or a shrublike branch of a tree; as, bushes to support pea vines 
- bush
- United States electrical engineer who designed an early analogue computer and who led the scientific program of the United States during World War II (1890-1974) 
- bush
- A horticultural rather than strictly botanical category of woody plant that is distinguished from a tree by its multiple stems and lower height; usually less than 6m tall 
- bush
- The wild, uncultivated parts of some hot countries are referred to as the bush. They walked through the dense Mozambican bush for thirty six hours 
- bush
- To branch thickly in the manner of a bush 
- bush
- The countryside area of Australia that is neither arid nor remote enough to constitute the outback, and that can include areas of natural flora even within conurbations 
- bush
- A mechanical attachment, usually a metallic socket with a screw thread, such as the mechanism by which a camera is attached to a tripod 
- bush
- — a green plant that grows foliage close to the ground and has a number of woody stems 
- bush
- That thing that flowers generally grow on Good for hiding in, scratching backs on and of course, holding flowers which are NICE to smell! Watch our for BEES! 
- bush
- Vice President under Reagan and 41st President of the United States (born in 1924) 
- bush
-  {i} perennial plant which has woody stems and branches and ranges in height from very low to the size of a small tree, shrub; wilderness, outback; tuft; minor league
- bush
- provide with a bushing 
- bush
- To use a bush harrow on (land), for covering seeds sown; to harrow with a bush; as, to bush a piece of land; to bush seeds into the ground 
- bush
- The tail, or brush, of a fox 
- bush
- A thicket, or place abounding in trees or shrubs; a wild forest 
- bush
- Also "bush league " An amateur play or behavior 
- bush
- hair growing in the pubic area 
- bush
- a low woody perennial plant usually having several major branches 
- bush
- A general term for forest or woodland, but normally used to describe indigenous forest 
- bush
- A lining for a hole to make it smaller; a thimble or ring of metal or wood inserted in a plate or other part of machinery to receive the wear of a pivot or arbor 
- bush
- a large wilderness area Vice President under Reagan and 41st President of the United States (born in 1924) United States electrical engineer who designed an early analogue computer and who led the scientific program of the United States during World War II (1890-1974) 43rd President of the United States; son of George Herbert Walker Bush (born in 1946) provide with a bushing 
- bush
- Any area outside a city or town with limited access to the rest of the state 
- bush administration
- the executive under President Bush 
- bush baby
- Any of several small, nocturnal African primates of the genera Galago and Euoticus, having dense, woolly fur, large round eyes, prominent ears, and a long tail. Also called galago 
- bush clover
-  {i} shrub or plant of the legume family with three-leafed leaves and small flowers
- bush clover
- Any of various plants of the genus Lespedeza in the pea family, having compound leaves with three leaflets and various colored flowers and often grown for forage, soil improvement, erosion control, or ornament. Also called lespedeza 
- bush clover
- shrubby or herbaceous plants widely used for forage, soil improvement, and especially hay in southern United States 
- bush cow
-  {i} zamouse, West African buffalo that has short horns and large ears fringed on the inside and three rows of long hair (has no dewlap)
- bush hammer
- metal hammer with one or two flat quare faces that are covered in a series of pyramidal points (used to carve stone) 
- bush hibiscus
- southern and western Australian shrub with unlobed or shallowly lobed toothed leaves and purple flowers; sometimes placed in genus Hibiscus 
- bush honeysuckle
- spreading bush of northeastern United States having small clusters of fragrant green-yellow flowers bush honeysuckle of southeastern United States having large crowded clusters of sulfur-yellow flowers a honeysuckle shrub of southern Russia to central Asia 
- bush jacket
- a loose fitting jacket; resembles a shirt with four patch pockets and a belt 
- bush jacket
- A long, cotton shirtlike jacket usually with four flat pockets and a belt 
- bush league
- minor league (non-professional baseball league) 
- bush league
- A minor league.bush leaguer n. badly done or of such bad quality that it is not acceptable 
- bush nasturtium
- annual with deep yellow flowers smaller than the common garden nasturtium 
- bush out
- grow outward; "the plant quickly bushed out 
- bush pea
- any of various plants of the genus Thermopsis having trifoliate leaves and yellow or purple racemose flowers 
- bush pig
- A hog (Potamochoerus porcus) of southern Africa, having long tufts of hair on the face and ears 
- bush pilot
- A person who flies a small airplane to and from areas inaccessible to larger aircraft or other means of transportation 
- bush poppy
- evergreen shrub of southwestern United States and Mexico often cultivated for its fragrant golden yellow flowers 
- bush shrike
- African shrike 
- bush vetch
- European purple-flowered with slender stems; occurs as a weed in hedges 
- bush violet
- any of several herbs of the genus Browallia cultivated for their blue or violet or white flowers 
- bush willow
- small deciduous tree of the Transvaal having spikes of yellow flowers small South African tree having creamy yellow fragrant flowers usually growing on stream banks 
- bush-league
- not of the highest quality or sophistication 
- butterfly bush
- Any of various shrubs of the genus Buddleja native chiefly to warm regions and cultivated for their showy clusters of small, variously colored flowers. Also called buddleia 
- butterfly bush
- tropical shrub having clusters of white or violet or yellow flowers 
- caper bush
- See Capper, a plant, 2 
- christmas bush
- Australian tree or shrub with red flowers; often used in Christmas decoration 
- coral bush
- Australian shrub having simple obovate leaves and brilliant scarlet flowers 
- cranberry bush
- deciduous North American shrub or small tree having three-lobed leaves and red berries 
- cranberry bush
- A North American shrub (Viburnum trilobum) having broad clusters of white flowers and scarlet fruit. Also called cranberry tree, highbush cranberry 
- creosote bush
- A shrub (Covillea mexicana) found in desert regions from Colorado to California and southward through Mexico 
- creosote bush
- desert shrub of southwestern United States and New Mexico having persistent resinous aromatic foliage and small yellow flowers 
- creosote bush
- Any of several resinous aromatic evergreen shrubs of the genus Larrea, especially L. tridentata, a yellow-flowered plant characteristic of warm deserts in the southwest United States and Mexico 
- creosote bush
- It has yellow flowers and very resinous foliage with a strong odor of creosote 
- flannel bush
- Any of various shrubs or small trees of the genus Fremontodendron of California and northern Mexico, having downy, lobed leaves and showy yellow flowers 
- fringe bush
- small bushy tree of southeastern United States having profuse clusters of white flowers 
- george bush
- Vice President under Reagan and 41st President of the United States (born in 1924) 
- george bush
- 43rd President of the United States; son of George Herbert Walker Bush (born in 1946) 
- high-bush blueberry
- high-growing deciduous shrub of eastern North America bearing edible blueish to blackish berries with a distinct bloom; source of most cultivated blueberries 
- hoary golden bush
- western American shrubs having white felted foliage and yellow flowers that become red-purple 
- low-bush blueberry
- low-growing deciduous shrub of northeastern North America having flowers in compact racemes and bearing sweet dark blue berries 
- marmalade bush
- evergreen South American shrub having showy trumpet-shaped orange flowers; grown as an ornamental or houseplant 
- poison bush
- any of various Australian evergreen shrubs of the genus Gastrolobium having whorled compound leaves poisonous to livestock and showy yellow to deep reddish-orange flowers followed by two-seeded pods 
- poison bush
- Any fabaceous shrub of the genus Gastrolobium, the herbage of which is poisonous to stock; also, any species of several related genera, as Oxylobium, Gompholobium, etc 
- poison bush
- The plant Myoporum deserti, often distinguished as Ellangowan poison bush or dogwood poison bush 
- poison bush
- The ulmaceous plant Trema cannabina, which, though not poisonous, is injurious to stock because of its large amount of fiber 
- quail bush
- spiny shrub with silvery-scurfy foliage of alkaline plains of southwestern United States and Mexico 
- ringworm bush
- tropical shrub (especially of Americas) having yellow flowers and large leaves whose juice is used as a cure for ringworm and poisonous bites; sometimes placed in genus Cassia 
- scarlet bush
- handsome shrub with showy orange to scarlet or crimson flowers; Florida and West Indies to Mexico and Brazil 
- small bush
- low small shrub 
- smoke bush
- any of various shrubs of the genus Conospermum with panicles of mostly white woolly flowers 
- strawberry bush
- upright deciduous plant with crimson pods and seeds; the eastern United States from New York to Florida and Texas 
- strawberry bush
- An erect to straggly shrub (Euonymus americanus) of the eastern United States having inconspicuous flowers and showy pinkish fruit 
- sugar bush
- A grove of sugar maples used as a source of maple syrup or maple sugar. Also called sugar orchard 
- sugar-bush
- evergreen shrub of southeastern United States with spikes of reddish-yellow flowers and glandular hairy fruits 
- the thief doth fear each bush an officer
- every thief becomes paranoid that he will be found out (one who is guilty of a crime tends to reveal himself by developing an overly sensitive nature) 
- thorn-bush
- type of bush that has sharp briars