(Med.) A chronic contagious affection of the skin, prevalent in the tropics. [ Webster 1913 Suppl. ]
(Bot.) A plant with flowers shaped like buttons; especially, several species of
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n. [ OE. boton, botoun, F. bouton button, bud, prop. something pushing out, fr. bouter to push. See Butt an end. ]
Button hook,
Button shell (Zool.),
Button snakeroot. (Bot.)
Button tree (Bot.),
To hold by the button,
v. t.
He was a tall, fat, long-bodied man, buttoned up to the throat in a tight green coat. Dickens. [ 1913 Webster ]
v. i. To be fastened by a button or buttons;
n. (Bot.) See Buttonwood. [ 1913 Webster ]
n. (Bot.) A shrub (Cephalanthus occidentalis) growing by the waterside; -- so called from its globular head of flowers. See Capitulum. [ 1913 Webster ]
adj. furnished with buttons or something buttonlike. Opposite of
adj. conservatively formal and businesslike in dress and manner.
a colorful character in the
adj.
n. The hole or loop in which a button is caught. [ 1913 Webster ]
v. t. To hold at the button or buttonhole; to detain in conversation to weariness; to bore;
n. A disk of bone, wood, or other material, which is made into a button by covering it with cloth.
Fossil buttonmolds,
n. A boy servant, or page, -- in allusion to the buttons on his livery. [ Colloq. ] Dickens. [ 1913 Webster ]
n. (Bot.) The name of several plants of the genera
n. (Bot.) The Platanus occidentalis, or American plane tree, a large tree, producing rough balls, from which it is named; -- called also
a. Ornamented with a large number of buttons. “The buttony boy.” Thackeray. “My coat so blue and buttony.” W. S. Gilbert. [ 1913 Webster ]
. (Elec.) A simple device, resembling a button in form, so arranged that pushing it closes an electric circuit, as of an electric bell; -- called also
v. t. [ 1st pref. un- + button. ] To loose the buttons of; to unfasten. [ 1913 Webster ]