English to Binisaya - Cebuano Dictionary and Thesaurus.

Dictionary Binisaya to EnglishEnglish to BinisayaSense
Word:

 

Word - rootword - affixes
buwagan - buwag - -an~
bu.wa.gan. - 3 syllables

-an = buwagan
buwagan

buwagan : break up (v.); jilt (v.)
buwag : separate (adj.); apart (adv.); give up (v.)
Synonyms: bulagan

Derivatives of buwag


Glosses:
break up
v. (motion)1. break up, dispel, disperse, dissipate, scatterto cause to separate and go in different directions.; "She waved her hand and scattered the crowds"
~ disbandcause to break up or cease to function.; "the principal disbanded the political student organization"
~ divide, separatemake a division or separation.
v. (social)2. break, break up, part, separate, split, split updiscontinue an association or relation; go different ways.; "The business partners broke over a tax question"; "The couple separated after 25 years of marriage"; "My friend and I split up"
~ give the bounce, give the gate, give the axeterminate a relationship abruptly.; "Mary gave John the axe after she saw him with another woman"
~ disunify, break apartbreak up or separate.; "The country is disunifying"; "Yugoslavia broke apart after 1989"
~ disassociate, disjoint, dissociate, disunite, divorcepart; cease or break association with.; "She disassociated herself from the organization when she found out the identity of the president"
~ break withend a relationship.; "China broke with Russia"
~ split up, divorceget a divorce; formally terminate a marriage.; "The couple divorced after only 6 months"
~ secede, splinter, break awaywithdraw from an organization or communion.; "After the break up of the Soviet Union, many republics broke away"
~ break away, breakinterrupt a continued activity.; "She had broken with the traditional patterns"
v. (motion)3. break upcome apart.; "the group broke up"
~ disband, dissolvestop functioning or cohering as a unit.; "The political wing of the party dissolved after much internal fighting"
~ part, split, separatego one's own way; move apart.; "The friends separated after the party"
v. (contact)4. break apart, break up, crashbreak violently or noisily; smash.
~ disintegratebreak into parts or components or lose cohesion or unity.; "The material disintegrated"; "the group disintegrated after the leader died"
~ crashcause to crash.; "The terrorists crashed the plane into the palace"; "Mother crashed the motorbike into the lamppost"
v. (communication)5. break up, cut off, disrupt, interruptmake a break in.; "We interrupt the program for the following messages"
~ cut off, cutcease, stop.; "cut the noise"; "We had to cut short the conversation"
~ break off, discontinue, stop, breakprevent completion.; "stop the project"; "break off the negotiations"
~ punctuateinterrupt periodically.; "Her sharp questions punctuated the speaker's drone"
~ breakinterrupt the flow of current in.; "break a circuit"
~ put aside, put awayturn away from and put aside, perhaps temporarily.; "it's time for you to put away childish things"
~ intermit, pause, breakcease an action temporarily.; "We pause for station identification"; "let's break for lunch"
~ butt in, chime in, chisel in, barge in, break in, cut in, put inbreak into a conversation.; "her husband always chimes in, even when he is not involved in the conversation"
~ burst in on, burst uponspring suddenly.; "He burst upon our conversation"
~ hecklechallenge aggressively.
~ interject, interpose, throw in, come in, inject, put into insert between other elements.; "She interjected clever remarks"
~ block, jaminterfere with or prevent the reception of signals.; "Jam the Voice of America"; "block the signals emitted by this station"
~ stop over, stopinterrupt a trip.; "we stopped at Aunt Mary's house"; "they stopped for three days in Florence"
~ take time off, take offtake time off from work; stop working temporarily.
v. (change)6. break up, dissolve, resolvecause to go into a solution.; "The recipe says that we should dissolve a cup of sugar in two cups of water"
~ change integritychange in physical make-up.
~ melt, melt down, runreduce or cause to be reduced from a solid to a liquid state, usually by heating.; "melt butter"; "melt down gold"; "The wax melted in the sun"
~ dissolvepass into a solution.; "The sugar quickly dissolved in the coffee"
~ cutdissolve by breaking down the fat of.; "soap cuts grease"
v. (emotion)7. break up, collapse, crack, crack up, crock upsuffer a nervous breakdown.
~ suffer, sustain, have, getundergo (as of injuries and illnesses).; "She suffered a fracture in the accident"; "He had an insulin shock after eating three candy bars"; "She got a bruise on her leg"; "He got his arm broken in the scuffle"
v. (creation)8. break apart, break up, disassemble, dismantle, take aparttake apart into its constituent pieces.
~ destroy, destructdo away with, cause the destruction or undoing of.; "The fire destroyed the house"
v. (contact)9. break, break updestroy the completeness of a set of related items.; "The book dealer would not break the set"
~ alter, change, modifycause to change; make different; cause a transformation.; "The advent of the automobile may have altered the growth pattern of the city"; "The discussion has changed my thinking about the issue"
~ breakexchange for smaller units of money.; "I had to break a $100 bill just to buy the candy"
v. (contact)10. break up, severset or keep apart.; "sever a relationship"
~ disunite, separate, part, divideforce, take, or pull apart.; "He separated the fighting children"; "Moses parted the Red Sea"
~ lop, discerp, severcut off from a whole.; "His head was severed from his body"; "The soul discerped from the body"
v. (contact)11. break up, pickattack with or as if with a pickaxe of ice or rocky ground, for example.; "Pick open the ice"
~ hack, chopcut with a hacking tool.
~ piercecut or make a way through.; "the knife cut through the flesh"; "The path pierced the jungle"; "Light pierced through the forest"
v. (contact)12. break up, calverelease ice.; "The icebergs and glaciers calve"
~ divide, part, separatecome apart.; "The two pieces that we had glued separated"
v. (change)13. adjourn, break up, recessclose at the end of a session.; "The court adjourned"
~ end, cease, terminate, finish, stophave an end, in a temporal, spatial, or quantitative sense; either spatial or metaphorical.; "the bronchioles terminate in a capillary bed"; "Your rights stop where you infringe upon the rights of other"; "My property ends by the bushes"; "The symphony ends in a pianissimo"
v. (change)14. break up, dissolvebring the association of to an end or cause to break up.; "The decree officially dissolved the marriage"; "the judge dissolved the tobacco company"
~ dismiss, dissolvedeclare void.; "The President dissolved the parliament and called for new elections"
~ terminate, endbring to an end or halt.; "She ended their friendship when she found out that he had once been convicted of a crime"; "The attack on Poland terminated the relatively peaceful period after WW I"
v. (change)15. break up, dissolvecome to an end.; "Their marriage dissolved"; "The tobacco monopoly broke up"
~ terminate, endbring to an end or halt.; "She ended their friendship when she found out that he had once been convicted of a crime"; "The attack on Poland terminated the relatively peaceful period after WW I"
v. (change)16. break up, fragment, fragmentise, fragmentizebreak or cause to break into pieces.; "The plate fragmented"
~ atomise, atomizebreak up into small particles.; "the fine powder had been atomized by air"
~ comminute, bray, mash, crunch, grindreduce to small pieces or particles by pounding or abrading.; "grind the spices in a mortar"; "mash the garlic"
~ poundbreak down and crush by beating, as with a pestle.; "pound the roots with a heavy flat stone"
~ come apart, break, fall apart, split up, separatebecome separated into pieces or fragments.; "The figurine broke"; "The freshly baked loaf fell apart"
~ sunderbreak apart or in two, using violence.
~ sliver, splinterbreak up into splinters or slivers.; "The wood splintered"
~ ragbreak into lumps before sorting.; "rag ore"
~ crumbbreak into crumbs.
~ brecciatebreak into breccia.; "brecciate rock"
~ crushbreak into small pieces.; "The car crushed the toy"
~ grind, gratemake a grating or grinding sound by rubbing together.; "grate one's teeth in anger"
v. (change)17. break up, disperse, scattercause to separate.; "break up kidney stones"; "disperse particles"
~ change integritychange in physical make-up.
~ backscatterscatter (radiation) by the atoms of the medium through which it passes.
v. (change)18. break down, break up, decomposeseparate (substances) into constituent elements or parts.
~ chemical science, chemistrythe science of matter; the branch of the natural sciences dealing with the composition of substances and their properties and reactions.
~ digestsoften or disintegrate by means of chemical action, heat, or moisture.
~ dissociateto undergo a reversible or temporary breakdown of a molecule into simpler molecules or atoms.; "acids dissociate to give hydrogen ions"
~ crackreduce (petroleum) to a simpler compound by cracking.
~ separatedivide into components or constituents.; "Separate the wheat from the chaff"
v. (body)19. break up, crack uplaugh unrestrainedly.
~ express joy, express mirth, laughproduce laughter.
jilt
n. (person)1. jilta woman who jilts a lover.
~ adult female, womanan adult female person (as opposed to a man).; "the woman kept house while the man hunted"
v. (cognition)2. jiltcast aside capriciously or unfeelingly.; "jilt a lover or a bride"
~ leavego and leave behind, either intentionally or by neglect or forgetfulness.; "She left a mess when she moved out"; "His good luck finally left him"; "her husband left her after 20 years of marriage"; "she wept thinking she had been left behind"
apart
adj. 1. apart, isolated, obscureremote and separate physically or socially.; "existed over the centuries as a world apart"; "preserved because they inhabited a place apart"; "tiny isolated villages remote from centers of civilization"; "an obscure village"
~ unconnectednot joined or linked together.
adj. 2. aparthaving characteristics not shared by others.; "scientists felt they were a group apart"
~ separateindependent; not united or joint.; "a problem consisting of two separate issues"; "they went their separate ways"; "formed a separate church"
adv. 3. apartseparated or at a distance in place or position or time.; "These towns are many miles apart"; "stood with his legs apart"; "born two years apart"
adv. 4. apart, asidenot taken into account or excluded from consideration.; "these problems apart, the country is doing well"; "all joking aside, I think you're crazy"
adv. 5. apartaway from another or others.; "they grew apart over the years"; "kept apart from the group out of shyness"; "decided to live apart"
adv. 6. apart, asideplaced or kept separate and distinct as for a purpose.; "had a feeling of being set apart"; "quality sets it apart"; "a day set aside for relaxing"
adv. 7. apartone from the other.; "people can't tell the twins apart"
adv. 8. apart, asunderinto parts or pieces.; "he took his father's watch apart"; "split apart"; "torn asunder"
give up
v. (possession)1. forego, forfeit, forgo, give up, throw overboard, waivelose (s.th.) or lose the right to (s.th.) by some error, offense, or crime.; "you've forfeited your right to name your successor"; "forfeited property"
~ abandonforsake, leave behind.; "We abandoned the old car in the empty parking lot"
~ lapselet slip.; "He lapsed his membership"
v. (possession)2. abandon, give upgive up with the intent of never claiming again.; "Abandon your life to God"; "She gave up her children to her ex-husband when she moved to Tahiti"; "We gave the drowning victim up for dead"
~ foreswear, relinquish, renounce, quitturn away from; give up.; "I am foreswearing women forever"
v. (competition)3. chuck up the sponge, drop by the wayside, drop out, fall by the wayside, give up, quit, throw in, throw in the towelgive up in the face of defeat of lacking hope; admit defeat.; "In the second round, the challenger gave up"
v. (stative)4. cease, discontinue, give up, lay off, quit, stopput an end to a state or an activity.; "Quit teasing your little brother"
~ knock off, dropstop pursuing or acting.; "drop a lawsuit"; "knock it off!"
~ leave offstop using.; "leave off your jacket--no need to wear it here"
~ sign offcease broadcasting; get off the air; as of radio stations.
~ retire, withdrawwithdraw from active participation.; "He retired from chess"
~ pull the plugprevent from happening or continuing.; "The government pulled the plug on spending"
~ close off, shut offstem the flow of.; "shut off the gas when you leave for a vacation"
~ cheeseused in the imperative (get away, or stop it).; "Cheese it!"
~ call it a day, call it quitsstop doing what one is doing.; "At midnight, the student decided to call it quits and closed his books"
~ breakgive up.; "break cigarette smoking"
v. (possession)5. dispense with, give up, part with, sparegive up what is not strictly needed.; "he asked if they could spare one of their horses to speed his journey"
~ givetransfer possession of something concrete or abstract to somebody.; "I gave her my money"; "can you give me lessons?"; "She gave the children lots of love and tender loving care"
v. (possession)6. free, give up, release, relinquish, resignpart with a possession or right.; "I am relinquishing my bedroom to the long-term house guest"; "resign a claim to the throne"
~ hand, pass on, turn over, pass, reach, giveplace into the hands or custody of.; "hand me the spoon, please"; "Turn the files over to me, please"; "He turned over the prisoner to his lawyers"
~ derequisitionrelease from government control.
~ sacrifice, giveendure the loss of.; "He gave his life for his children"; "I gave two sons to the war"
v. (social)7. give up, renounce, resign, vacateleave (a job, post, or position) voluntarily.; "She vacated the position when she got pregnant"; "The chairman resigned when he was found to have misappropriated funds"
~ abdicate, renouncegive up, such as power, as of monarchs and emperors, or duties and obligations.; "The King abdicated when he married a divorcee"
~ leave office, step down, quit, resigngive up or retire from a position.; "The Secretary of the Navy will leave office next month"; "The chairman resigned over the financial scandal"
v. (possession)8. cede, deliver, give up, surrenderrelinquish possession or control over.; "The squatters had to surrender the building after the police moved in"
~ gift, present, givegive as a present; make a gift of.; "What will you give her for her birthday?"
~ yield upsurrender, as a result of pressure or force.
~ sellgive up for a price or reward.; "She sold her principles for a successful career"
~ sign away, sign overformally assign ownership of.; "She signed away her rights"
v. (competition)9. give up, surrendergive up or agree to forgo to the power or possession of another.; "The last Taleban fighters finally surrendered"
~ abnegatesurrender (power or a position).; "The King abnegated his power to the ministers"
~ yieldcease opposition; stop fighting.
~ concedeacknowledge defeat.; "The candidate conceded after enough votes had come in to show that he would lose"
~ capitulatesurrender under agreed conditions.
v. (cognition)10. abandon, give upstop maintaining or insisting on; of ideas or claims.; "He abandoned the thought of asking for her hand in marriage"; "Both sides have to give up some claims in these negotiations"
~ ease up, give way, move over, yield, givemove in order to make room for someone for something.; "The park gave way to a supermarket"; "`Move over,' he told the crowd"
~ cave in, collapse, fall in, give way, founder, give, breakbreak down, literally or metaphorically.; "The wall collapsed"; "The business collapsed"; "The dam broke"; "The roof collapsed"; "The wall gave in"; "The roof finally gave under the weight of the ice"
v. (social)11. allow, give upallow the other (baseball) team to score.; "give up a run"
v. (consumption)12. give up, kickstop consuming.; "kick a habit"; "give up alcohol"
~ foreswear, forgo, waive, dispense with, forego, relinquishdo without or cease to hold or adhere to.; "We are dispensing with formalities"; "relinquish the old ideas"