buttons
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈbʌtn̩z/
Audio (AU) (file) - Hyphenation: but‧tons
Noun
buttons
- The dung of sheep.
- (colloquial) A remote control.
- (colloquial, dated) A boy servant, or page.
- 1860 December – 1861 August, Charles Dickens, Great Expectations […], volumes (please specify |volume=I to III), London: Chapman and Hall, […], published October 1861, →OCLC:
- A Custum' Us officer knows what to do with his Buttons, "said the Jack , repeating the obnoxious word with the greatest contempt , “when they comes betwixt him and his own light […] "
- (slang) A policeman.
- 1939, Raymond Chandler, The Big Sleep, Penguin, published 2011, page 78:
- ‘Go ahead, call the buttons. You'll get a big reaction from it.’
- (colloquial) Synonym of marbles (“sanity; mental faculties”)
- 2004, Jane Stevenson, The Empress of the Last Days, page 109:
- And we've got that other boy now, Ganesh something, I met him once, and I didn't understand a word he was saying, but the child seems to have all his buttons.
- 2006, Frances Hunter, To the Ends of the Earth: The Last Journey of Lewis & Clark, page 84:
- That night in his room before he'd left for New Orleans, Lewis had behaved like he didn't have all his buttons.
- 2018, Cherry Wilson, Outcasts of Picture Rocks:
- In the quaint vernacular of old Dad Peppin, Zion Jore might not have all his buttons, but he had more of what he did have than most men—more imagination to conceive a plot, more daring to carry it out, no fear to hamper him, […]
- A small South African plant of the genus Conophytum, with button-like succulent leaves covering its exterior.
French
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /by.tɔ̃/
Verb
buttons
- inflection of butter:
- first-person plural present indicative
- first-person plural imperative
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