(colloquial) Not skilled; not professional; not major league.
adv
(Australia) Towards the direction of the outback.
noun
(Australia) The countryside area of Australia that is less arid and less remote than the outback; loosely, areas of natural flora even within conurbations.
(Canada) A woodlot or bluff on a farm.
(Canada) The wild forested areas of Canada; upcountry.
(New Zealand) An area of New Zealand covered in forest, especially native forest.
(archaic) A tavern or wine merchant.
(baseball) Amateurish behavior, short for "bush league behavior"
(historical) A shrub or branch, properly, a branch of ivy (sacred to Bacchus), hung out at vintners' doors, or as a tavern sign; hence, a tavern sign, and symbolically, the tavern itself.
(horticulture) A woody plant distinguished from a tree by its multiple stems and lower height, being usually less than six metres tall; a horticultural rather than strictly botanical category.
(hunting) The tail, or brush, of a fox.
(often with "the") Tracts of land covered in natural vegetation that are largely undeveloped and uncultivated.
(slang, vulgar) A person's pubic hair, especially a woman's.
A mechanical attachment, usually a metallic socket with a screw thread, such as the mechanism by which a camera is attached to a tripod stand.
A piece of copper, screwed into a gun, through which the venthole is bored.
A shrub cut off, or a shrublike branch of a tree.
A thick washer or hollow cylinder of metal.
verb
(intransitive) To branch thickly in the manner of a bush.
(transitive) To furnish with a bush or lining; to line.
To become bushy (often used with up).
To set bushes for; to support with bushes.
To use a bush harrow on (land), for covering seeds sown; to harrow with a bush.