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I . course [kɔ:s, Am kɔ:rs] N

3. course (treatment):

5. course (part of meal):

6. course archit (layer):

II . bounce [baʊns] VB trans

III . bounce [baʊns] N

1. bounce (rebound):

2. bounce no pl (spring):

I . curse [kɜ:s, Am kɜ:rs] VB intr

1. curse (swear):

2. curse (blaspheme):

II . curse [kɜ:s, Am kɜ:rs] VB trans

1. curse (swear at):

I . nurse [nɜ:s, Am nɜ:rs] N

1. nurse (health worker):

2. nurse (nanny):

III . nurse [nɜ:s, Am nɜ:rs] VB trans

II . purse [pɜ:s, Am pɜ:rs] VB trans

III . purse [pɜ:s, Am pɜ:rs] VB intr

gorse [gɔ:s, Am gɔ:rs] N no pl

See also badly , bad

I . bad <worse, worst> [bæd] ADJ

II . bad <worse, worst> [bæd] ADV inf

hoarse [hɔ:s, Am hɔ:rs] ADJ

bourbon [ˈbɜ:bən, Am ˈbɜ:r-] N

boulder [ˈbəʊldəɐ, Am ˈboʊldɚ] N

bouncer [ˈbaʊnsəɐ, Am -sɚ] N

bouquet [bʊˈkeɪ, Am boʊ-] N

1. bouquet of flowers:

2. bouquet (compliment):

3. bouquet (smell, aroma):

bough [baʊ] N liter BOT

I . bound1 [baʊnd] VB intr

1. bound (leap):

2. bound (bounce):

bounty <-ies> [ˈbaʊntɪ, Am -t̬ɪ] N

1. bounty (reward):

2. bounty (gift):

дар m

3. bounty lit (generosity):

bouncy [ˈbaʊn(t)si] ADJ

1. bouncy ball:

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
In 2004 an agricultural bourse started trading agricultural and related products in the country.
en.wikipedia.org
Its shares has consistently been one of the most heavily traded stocks on the local bourse despite the company's listing on the secondary market.
en.wikipedia.org
The administration of the bourse was by elected representatives.
en.wikipedia.org
Its main attraction is its close proximity to the diamond bourse, where in earlier days a large part of the community worked.
en.wikipedia.org
In 1585 a bourse was established to set up fixed currency exchange rates.
en.wikipedia.org
The new system has made it possible to link the stock market to the international bourses.
en.wikipedia.org
The bourse will offer 40 kinds of oil products.
en.wikipedia.org
There is also a lack of sizeable independent private companies that could benefit from using the bourse to raise capital.
en.wikipedia.org
Some dealers also jointly set up week-end stamp markets called bourses that move around a region from week to week.
en.wikipedia.org
He did a frieze for the bourse with maritime allegories.
en.wikipedia.org

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