buggy
小车,小汽车,小货车,小狗
Related Words
Definitions
- 1
plural bug·gies.
- : a light, four-wheeled, horse-drawn carriage with a single seat and a transverse spring.
- : a light, two-wheeled carriage with a folding top.
- : baby carriage.
- : Older Slang. an automobile, especially an old or dilapidated one.
- : a small wagon or truck for transporting heavy materials, as coal in a mine or freshly mixed concrete at a construction site, for short distances.
- : Metallurgy. a car, as for transporting ingots or charges for open-hearth furnaces.
- : any of various small vehicles adapted for use on a given terrain, as on sand beaches or swamps.
- : British. a light, two-wheeled, open carriage.
Synonyms & Antonyms
Examples
Some last-minute software updates alleviated a number of issues and slowdowns, but it remained a pretty buggy experience overall.
Its buggy software, dearth of double-screen app support and underwhelming camera will only frustrate people trying to do anything besides write emails and take notes.
People living in southern Africa around 200,000 years ago not only slept on grass bedding but occasionally burned it, apparently to keep from going buggy.
Time for Googlebot to re-crawl the page and then a combination of Google’s cache and a buggy new Search Console to be able to interpret those changes.
The Galaxy S20 Ultra, aside from its buggy camera, questionable zoom functionality, and eye-watering price point, is a decent smartphone.
The cars had plush green upholstery and stained-glass windows and were faster and cheaper than a horse-and-buggy.
Ford began tinkering in his garage in Detroit in the 1890s, trains and the horse and buggy was the dominant mode of transport.
But the programs were buggy and often prone to false positives, alerting a network administrator too often to routine behavior.
Some people believe it is only a matter of time until all bookstores go the way of the horse and buggy.
As illustrated in this publication, we have already landed on it and driven across it in a buggy.
Accordingly, she had the boys to hitch a team to a buggy and took him driving over the great estate.
He had transferred himself to the buggy with a grumble of disgust, and begged her to come for him early in the morning.
He drives a white mule, and has managed to put a top of sail cloth on an old ramshackle buggy, which he calls a 'shay.'
Gwynne rang for his guest's buggy, thanked him for his advice; then ordered his horse and rode about the ranch half the night.
And she carefully gathered up her papers and went to the rescue of the weary Miss Boutts, while Gwynne ordered the buggy.