Bo
brought over.
Board of Ordnance.
Informal. body odor.
Theater. box office.
back order.
box office.
branch office.
broker’s order.
buyer’s option.
Contemporary Examples
Bo Xilai’s Sacking Signals Showdown In China’s Communist Party Rosemary Righter March 14, 2012
National Scrabble Day: A Poem So You’ll Know All 101 Two-Letter Words David Bukszpan April 12, 2013
China’s Corruption Purge: The Fall of Zhou Yongkang Wenguang Huang, Ho Pin December 11, 2013
Obamas Deck the White House Halls Robin Givhan November 27, 2012
Bo Xilai’s Sacking Signals Showdown In China’s Communist Party Rosemary Righter March 14, 2012
Historical Examples
The Man of the Forest Zane Grey
The Boy Slaves Mayne Reid
Character Sketches of Romance, Fiction and the Drama, Vol 1 The Rev. E. Cobham Brewer, LL.D.
Betty Leicester Sarah Orne Jewett
The Man of the Forest Zane Grey
interjection
an exclamation uttered to startle or surprise someone, esp a child in a game
(slang) an exclamation of encouragement or an expression of enthusiasm
abbreviation
Bolivia
abbreviation
(informal) body odour
box office
abbreviation
(accounting) brought over
buyer’s option
abbreviation
back order
branch office
broker’s order
buyer’s option
n.
Tibetan
back order
best offer
body odor
box office
branch office
broker’s order
buyer’s option
best offer
Read Also:
- Bns
Bachelor of Naval Science. Bachelor of Naval Science
- Davis
Alexander Jackson, 1803–92, U.S. architect. Benjamin Oliver, 1877–1970, U.S. military officer: first black Army brigadier general. his son, Benjamin Oliver, Jr. 1912–2002, U.S. military officer: first black Air Force lieutenant general. Bette [bet-ee] /ˈbɛt i/ (Show IPA), (Ruth Elizabeth Davis) 1908–89, U.S. film actress. Dwight F(illey) [fil-ee] /ˈfɪl i/ (Show IPA), 1879–1945, U.S. tennis player […]
- Bo-diddley-beat
noun a type of syncopated Black rhythm, frequently used in rock music
- Diddley
Bo [boh] /boʊ/ (Show IPA), (Elias McDaniel) 1928–2008, U.S. rock-‘n’-roll singer, guitarist, and composer.
- Donn-byrne
Brian Oswald (“Donn Byrne”) 1889–1928, U.S. novelist and short-story writer.