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Hive vs Busy - What's the difference?

hive | busy |

As nouns the difference between hive and busy

is that hive is (label) winter while busy is a police officer.

As an adjective busy is

crowded with business or activities; having a great deal going on.

As a verb busy is

to make somebody busy , to keep busy with, to occupy, to make occupied.

hive

English

Noun

(en noun)
  • A structure for housing a swarm of honeybees.
  • (Dryden)
  • The bees of one hive; a swarm of bees.
  • (Shakespeare)
  • A place swarming with busy occupants; a crowd.
  • a wretched hive of scum and villainy
  • * Tennyson
  • the hive of Roman liars
  • (computing, Microsoft Windows) A section of the registry.
  • * 2006 , Jean Andrews, Fixing Windows XP (page 352)
  • Windows builds the registry from the five registry hives
  • * 2011 , Samuel Phung, Professional Microsoft Windows Embedded CE 6.0
  • For devices built with hive-based registry implementation, the registry data are broken into three different hives — the boot hive, system hive, and user hive.

    Derived terms

    * beehive * hivemind * mother-hive * superhive * hive five

    See also

    * apiary

    Verb

    (hiv)
  • (entomology) To enter or possess a hive.
  • To form a hive-like entity.
  • To collect into a hive.
  • to hive a swarm of bees
  • To store in a hive or similarly.
  • * Byron
  • Hiving wisdom with each studious year.
  • To take shelter or lodgings together; to reside in a collective body.
  • (Alexander Pope)

    Derived terms

    * hive off English collective nouns

    busy

    English

    Adjective

    (er)
  • Crowded with business or activities; having a great deal going on.
  • a busy street
  • * Shakespeare
  • To-morrow is a busy day.
  • Engaged in another activity or by someone else.
  • The director cannot see you now, he's busy .
    Her telephone has been busy all day.
    She is too busy to have time for riddles.
  • Having a lot going on; complicated or intricate.
  • Flowers, stripes, and checks in the same fabric make for a busy pattern.
  • Officious; meddling.
  • * 1603 , , IV. ii. 130:
  • I will be hanged if some eternal villain, / Some busy and insinuating rogue, / Some cogging, cozening slave, to get some office, / Have not devised this slander; I'll be hanged else.

    Verb

  • To make somebody busy , to keep busy with, to occupy, to make occupied.
  • * On my vacation I'll busy myself with gardening.
  • To rush somebody.
  • Noun

    (busies)
  • A police officer.