Country Dictionary

A fork of Rural Dictionary

bugle

The bugle is a brass instrument used for marching purposes. They have been used in the military, bands, and drum corps. The standard bugle has no valves, but looks like a trumpet, and can only play certain intervals. There are other types of bugles: Soprano, Alto, Mellophone, French horn, Baritone, Euphonium, and Contrabass. All the above instruments have been marched in Drum and Bugle Corps.

Did you see that bugle? It had one valve and one rotor!

by G Bass March 14, 2006

bugl

when someone is having a seizure and all they can do is mumble dumbass words like "bugl"

"gugl, bugl gugl fugl, fregl?" oh god james are you ok

by the daily testicle October 28, 2020

bugles

Bugles are cone shaped crunchy snacks often sold in vending machines. Hunched over bitches like to eat them after sex.

After sex, hunched over bitch's cat ( Bojangles) licks up all the Bugles crumbs.

by annamal83 September 11, 2013

bugle

big ass horn

look at the size of his bugle

by kovack September 07, 2003

Bugling

A sex game wherein the bugler alerts his/her friends that they are mid-intercourse by placing their thumb to their lips with a clenched fist and loudly mimicking the sound of a bugle. The friends of the bugler respond to the call by galloping into the room on invisible horses, whilst shouting "charge!" in the style of a 19th century cavalry regiment.

Lad 1 - "That girl sure wasn't impressed with your bugling last night." Bugler - "Yeh, she cried for ages after the initial shock"

by YEHM8 June 19, 2013

bugle

An object, person or place which is amazing, beautiful or generally has outstanding quality.

Rio is an absolute bugle of a city. Alice is a little bugle.

by Henrick Herring August 06, 2006

bugle

Introduced to the English language as "beaugal", in 1634. Sir Frederick von Stuperheimer, a half German, half British Buddhist, had it officially altered to "bugle" because Parliament took pity on the man since he was legally retarded and presented his "case" to them; it was a soggy notebook filled with moldy cheese and worms. If it wasn't, perhaps, for Sir Frederick, we'd still be saying beaugal to this very day. Pay homage to this master of the illiterary arts at his grave in the Upper West Side of Manhattan.

The bugle is a instrument, I think.