{v. phr.} To be connected; be involved with.
•/Tuition at our university is bound up with the state budget./
[bow]
See: TAKE A BOW.
[bow and scrape]
{v.} To be too polite or obedient from fear or hope of
gain; act like a slave. •/The old servant bowed and scraped before them, too
obedient and eager to please./
[bowl of cherries]
See: BED OF ROSES.
[bowl over]
{v.}, {informal} 1. To knock down as if with a bowled
ball. •/The taxi hit him a glancing blow and bowled him over./ 2. To
astonish with success or shock with misfortune; upset; stun. •/He was bowled
over by his wife’s sudden death./ •/The young actress bowled over everybody
in her first movie./
[bow out]
{v.}, {informal} 1. To give up taking part; excuse
yourself from doing any more; quit. •/Mr. Black often quarreled with his
partners, so finally he bowed out of the company./ •/While the movie was
being filmed, the star got sick and had to bow out./ 2. To stop working after
a long service; retire. •/He bowed out as train engineer after forty years of
railroading./
[box]
See: IN A BIND or IN A BOX, PENALTY BOX, PRESS BOX, STUFF THE BALLOT
BOX, VOICE BOX.
[box office]
{n.}, {informal} 1. The place at movies and theaters
where tickets may be purchased just before the performance instead of having
ordered them through the telephone or having bought them at a ticket agency.
•/No need to reserve the seats; we can pick them up at the box office./ 2.
A best selling movie, musical, or drama (where the tickets are all always sold
out and people line up in front of the box office). •/John Wayne’s last movie
was a regular box office./ 3. Anything successful or well liked. •/Betsie
is no longer box office with me./
[boy]
See: ALL WORK AND NO PLAY MAKES JACK A DULL BOY, FAIR-HAIRED BOY,
MAMA’S BOY, OLD BOY, SEPARATE THE MEN FROM THE BOYS.
[boyfriend]
{n.}, {informal} 1. A male friend or companion.
•/"John and his boyfriends have gone to the ball game," said his mother./
2. A girl’s steady date, a woman’s favorite man friend; a male lover or
sweetheart. •/Jane’s new boyfriend is a senior in high school./ Contrast:
GIRL FRIEND.
[boys will be boys]
Boys are only children and must sometimes get into
mischief or trouble or behave too roughly. •/Boys will be boys and make a lot
of noise, so John’s mother told him and his friends to play in the park instead
of the back yard./
[brain]
See: BEAT ONE’S BRAINS OUT, BLOW ONE’S BRAINS OUT, ON THE BRAIN,
RACK ONE’S BRAIN, GET ONE’S BRAINS FRIED.
[brain bucket]
{n.}, {slang} A motorcycle helmet. •/If you want
to share a ride with me, you’ve got to wear a brain bucket./
[brain drain]
{n.}, {informal} 1. The loss of the leading
intellectuals and researchers of a country due to excessive emigration to other
countries where conditions are better. •/Britain suffered a considerable
brain drain to the United States after World War II./ 2. An activity
requiring great mental concentration resulting in fatigue and exhaustion
•/That math exam I took was a regular brain drain./
[brain-storm]
{v.} To have a discussion among fellow researchers or
co-workers on a project in order to find the best solution to a given problem.
•/Dr. Watson and his research assistants are brain-storming in the conference
room./
[brainstorm]
{n.} A sudden insight; a stroke of comprehension.
•/Listen to me, I’ve just had a major brainstorm, and I think I found the
solution to our problem./