Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    busy
    /ˈbɪzi/

    adjective

    verb

    • 1. keep oneself occupied: "she busied herself with her new home"

    noun

    • 1. a police officer: informal British "I was picked up by the busies for possession"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Learn the meaning of busy as an adjective and a verb, with synonyms, antonyms, and usage examples. Find out how to say busy in different contexts, such as work, time, place, or activity.

  3. Learn the meaning, synonyms, examples, and history of the word busy, which can be an adjective or a verb. Find out how to use busy in a sentence and how it differs from related words like industrious, diligent, and assiduous.

  4. Busy means actively or fully engaged in work or a pastime, or crowded with activity. Learn more about its origin, usage, and related words from Dictionary.com.

  5. having a lot to do; perhaps not free to do something else because you are working on something. Are you busy tonight? I'm afraid the doctor is busy at the moment. Can he call you back? The principal is a very busy woman. I'll be too busy to come to the meeting. She was always too busy to listen. I've got enough work to keep you busy.

  6. Learn the meaning of busy as an adjective and a verb, and see how to use it in different contexts. Find out the synonyms, antonyms, and translations of busy in other languages.

  7. busy means actively employed, temporarily or habitually: a busy official. diligent suggests earnest and constant effort or application, and usually connotes fondness for, or enjoyment of, what one is doing: a diligent student. industrious often implies a habitual characteristic of steady and zealous application, often with a definite goal: an ...

  8. Busy means engaged in activity, occupied, or crowded with much activity. Find out the different meanings, usage, and examples of busy in various contexts, such as work, life, or telephone lines.