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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Bunter

Bunter \Bun"ter\, n.

  1. A woman who picks up rags in the streets; hence, a low, vulgar woman. [Cant]

    Her . . . daughters, like bunters in stuff gowns.
    --Goldsmith.

  2. (Baseball) a batter who bunts[2].

Wiktionary
bunter

n. 1 (context baseball English) One who bunt#Verb. 2 A woman who picks up rags in the streets; hence, a low, vulgar woman.

WordNet
bunter

n. a batter who bunts

Wikipedia
Bunter

Bunter may refer to:

Geography

  • Bunter sandstone, a type of red sandstone common in large parts of western and central Europe
  • Bunter (geology), a feature in geology

Sport

  • In baseball, a player who performs the action of bunting is called a bunter.

People

  • Billy Bunter, a fictional character created by Charles Hamilton (using the nom de plume of Frank Richards).
  • Mervyn Bunter, butler to Lord Peter Wimsey, a fictional character created by Dorothy L. Sayers.
Bunter (geology)

Bunter beds are sandstone deposits containing rounded pebbles. They can be found in Warwickshire, Cheshire, Staffordshire, Nottinghamshire, Yorkshire, Devon and Dorset in England. They are thought to be alluvial deposits and, judging from the rounding of the mainly quartzite pebbles, to have resulted from prolonged transportation in a large and turbulent river, resulting in powerful abrasion. The deposits in the English Midlands are thought to have been transported in this way northwards from Brittany, France. This supposed river has been called the "Budleighensis", after the Devon village of Budleigh Salterton, a site where such deposits were discovered. The depositions took place in the lower Triassic period. Some newer conglomerates, e.g. near Ryton in Warwickshire, are thought to have arisen during the Ice Age by reworking and southward transportation of older deposits by ice flows.

The pebbles, also called cobbles, which can be used as gravel, as ballast or as cobblestones, are mainly milky-white quartzite but can vary in colour and composition, including some that are hard, reddish-coloured sandstone. The sandstone in which these pebbles are deposited can be used for building or as an aggregate for cement or concrete.

The name "Bunter" derives from the German term " Buntsandstein", "bunt" meaning "variegated" or "colourful", referring to the colour of the sandstone deposit, which varies from reddish to greenish. This sandstone is widespread across central Europe, notably in the Black Forest and Odenwald region of Germany, as well as the Vosges Mountains in northeastern France.

The sandstone can be hard enough for building, yet easy enough to "work", resulting in bridges, castles, cathedrals and churches constructed of reddish sandstone, throughout the relevant areas of Europe (e.g. Germany, Luxembourg, Switzerland, Alsace in France, Denmark, Poland). The land under which these beds lie is generally very well drained, creating heathlike conditions. Because of the drainage, the soil tends to be of low fertility. A notable area in Britain that has these characteristics is Cannock Chase, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB).

The long shingle tombolo of Chesil Beach in Dorset and the raised beach of Portland, Dorset are partly composed of Bunter pebbles. As yet, no fully satisfactory and universally accepted geological explanation has been formulated to explain their precise origin and mode of transport, as each proposed theory has its difficulties.

Usage examples of "bunter".

Formerly, such a visit would have been attended with great danger to the parties making the attempt, from the number of desperate characters who inhabited the back-slums lying in the rear of Broad-street: where used to be congregated together, the most notorious thieves, beggars, and bunters of the metropolis, amalgamated with the poverty and wretchedness of every country, but more particularly the lower classes of Irish, who still continue to exist in great numbers in the neighbourhood.

Bunter, who had slipped quickly down from the steps, stood, chain in hand, as though ready to put the gyves on a felon when he heard the word.

Bunter Pebble Beds, harder red and brown sandstones with quartzose pebbles, very abundant in some places.

Bunter, judicially, “the vegetables well packed in layers, on a foundation of bacon, not too fat, and the whole well seasoned with salt, pepper and paprika, there are few dishes to beat a casseroled chicken.

Both men reminded her of bunters who had caught the spoor of their prey.