Crossword clues for busse
busse
Wikipedia
Busse is a surname. People with this surname include:
- Andreas Busse (born 1959), East German (now German) former middle distance runner
- Carl Busse (architect) (1834-1896), German architect and master builder
- Carl Hermann Busse (1872–1918), German lyric poet and literary critic
- Ewald W. Busse (1917–2004), American psychiatrist, gerontologist, author and academic administrator
- Fred A. Busse (1866–1914), mayor of Chicago 1907–1911
- Friedhelm Busse (1929–2008) German neo-Nazi politician and activist
- Georg Heinrich Busse (1810–1868), German landscape painter and engraver
- Heinrich Busse (1909–1998), highly decorated Oberst in the Wehrmacht during World War II
- Henry Busse (1894–1955), German-born American jazz trumpeter
- Hermann Eris Busse (1891–1947), German novelist and literary critic
- Joachim Busse (born 1954), West German (now German) retired long jumper
- Joachim von Busse (born 1893, date of death unknown), German World War I flying ace
- Jochen Busse (born 1941), German television actor
- Martin Busse (born 1958), East German (now German) retired football midfielder
- Otto Busse (1867–1922), German pathologist
- Otto Busse (resistance fighter) (1901–1980), German resistance fighter
- Ray Busse (born 1948), American Major League Baseball shortstop 1971–1974
- Theodor Busse (1897–1986), German officer during World War I and World War II
- Tomasz Busse (born 1956), Polish former wrestler
- Walter Busse (born 1987), Argentine football midfielder
- Wilhelm Busse (1915–1944), highly decorated Oberstleutnant in the Wehrmacht during World War II
Usage examples of "busse".
This second gallery, dimly lighted like the one below, is a fretwork of wires, steel work, insulators, busses, switches, etc.
I suppose they must be busses, though, by the stars of space, they look like columns!
Gomblick said and looked up at the massive latticework of power busses that led to the ion cannons.
Lowering his head, he bussed her mouth with his before resuming his tactile exploration of her body.
She barreled along the desert highway, dodging busses, cars, giant boulders launched by her archenemy, Wile E.
Tahmasp enfolded Goudeles in a beefy embrace and bussed him on both cheeks.
In the event of war the strategic plan for the missiles was that they would be bussed about to various parts of the county on mobile launchers, making them less of a target for the enemy.
By trains they come, by busses, by cars, by planes, by wheelchairs, by feet.
According to Volg, Phamacognisie, 1892, it is still used in Central Europe in veterinary medicine, and Ludwig and Busse (1869) found it to contain mannite, mycose, pectin, mycogum, mycodextrin and mycoinulin.