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You are viewing results spelled similarly: bunker , buck , bun , bunk bed , bum , bundle , bunny and bunch

bunker [ˈbʌŋkər, Brit -əʳ] N

II . bunch <-es> [bʌntʃ] VB intr

bunny <-ies> [ˈbʌni] N

bum [bʌm] N

1. bum Am (lazy person):

bum
preguiçoso(-a) m (f)

2. bum Am (tramp):

bum
vagabundo(-a) m (f)

3. bum Aus, Brit inf (bottom):

bum

bunk bed N

bun [bʌn] N

1. bun (pastry):

bun

2. bun Am (for hamburger):

bun

3. bun (in hair):

bun
coque m

buck1 <-(s)> [bʌk] VB intr

buck horse:

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
There is only one way to describe this bunch of excuses: a load of bunkum.
swarajyamag.com
Reason tells you that it's keek, total bunkum.
thequietus.com
The old-timey word -- sometimes spelled bunkum -- refers to talk that's rubbish, nonsensical or empty.
o.canada.com
The show strikes me as purest bilge and bunkum.
www.telegraph.co.uk
As it's made into a film, there's just one question: is it all bunkum?
www.dailymail.co.uk
This is bunkum, and the government should know better.
theconversation.com
Talking about strategic planning now for five years is a load of bunkum.
www.punditarena.com
A little more than a year into his premiership, we now know this is bunkum.
www.telegraph.co.uk
And a surprisingly large number of commenters dismissed the right brain/left brain idea as self-evident bunkum.
theconversation.com
Let us consider some other reasons to indeed bunkum the point that pair-trawling exist.
www.ghanaweb.com

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