adj. frightened into submission or compliance.
n. [ Cf. OE. bullyon a hook used for fastening the dress, a button, stud, an embossed ornament of various kinds,
☞ Properly, the precious metals are called bullion, when smelted and not perfectly refined, or when refined, but in bars, ingots or in any form uncoined, as in plate. The word is often often used to denote gold and silver, both coined and uncoined, when reckoned by weight and in mass, including especially foreign, or uncurrent, coin. [ 1913 Webster ]
And those which eld's strict doom did disallow,
And damm for bullion, go for current now. Sylvester. [ 1913 Webster ]
The clasps and bullions were worth a thousand pound. Skelton. [ 1913 Webster ]
n. An advocate for a metallic currency, or a paper currency always convertible into gold. [ 1913 Webster ]
v. t. [ Cf. bully, n. & v., and rag to scold, rail. Cf. Ballarag. ] To intimidate by bullying; to rally contemptuously; to badger. [ Low ] [ 1913 Webster ]
a. Partaking of the nature of a bull, or a blunder. [ 1913 Webster ]
Let me inform you, a toothless satire is as improper as a toothed sleek stone, and as bullish. Milton. [ 1913 Webster ]
n. [ F. bulliste. See Bull an edict. ] A writer or drawer up of papal bulls. [ R. ] Harmar. [ 1913 Webster ]
n. [ L. bullire, bullitum, to boil. See Boil, v. i. ] The action of boiling; boiling. [ Obs. ] See Ebullition. Bacon. [ 1913 Webster ]