to budge

  • 51Budge Patty — John Budge Edward Patty (n. 11 de febrero de 1924) es un ex jugador de tenis estadounidense recordado por sus conquistas del Campeonato Francés y Wimbledon en 1950. Contenido 1 Torneos de Grand Slam 1.1 Campeón Individuales (2) …

    Wikipedia Español

  • 52Budge, Sir Wallis — ▪ British curator in full  Sir Ernest Alfred Thompson Wallis Budge  born , July 27, 1857, Cornwall, Eng. died Nov. 23, 1934, London       curator (1894–1924) of Egyptian and Assyrian antiquities at the British Museum, London, for which he… …

    Universalium

  • 53Budge Row —    South east from Watling Street to Cannon Street (P.O. Directory). In Walbrook and Cordwainer Wards.    Earliest mention found in records : Bogerowe, 1356 (Ct. H.W. II. 35).    It is mentioned as early as the 54 H. III. (Anc. Deeds, C. 1172),… …

    Dictionary of London

  • 54Budge center — Bud·ge center (boodґgē) [Julius Ludwig Budge, German physiologist, 1811–1888] 1. the ciliospinal center. 2. the genital center …

    Medical dictionary

  • 55Budge up — If you want to sit down and someone is taking up too much space, you d ask them to budge up move and make some space …

    The American's guide to speaking British

  • 56budge v — You feel stuck with your debt if you can t budge it …

    English expressions

  • 57budge up or over — informal make room for another person by moving. → budge …

    English new terms dictionary

  • 58budge — verb 1》 [usu. with negative] make or cause to make the slightest movement.     ↘(budge up or over) informal make room for another person by moving. 2》 change or cause to change an opinion. Origin C16: from Fr. bouger to stir , based on L. bullire …

    English new terms dictionary

  • 59budge up — Verb. To move, in order to make room for someone. E.g. Budge up and let Bob sit down …

    English slang and colloquialisms

  • 60budge — [c]/bʌdʒ / (say buj) verb (budged, budging) –verb (i) 1. to move slightly; give way (usually with negative). –verb (t) 2. to cause to budge (usually with negative). {French bouger, from Latin bullīre boil1} …