Butt

Noun

 * 1)  The buttocks; used as a euphemism, less objectionable than arse/ass
 * Get up off your butt and get to work.
 * 1)  The whole buttocks and pelvic region that includes one's private parts.
 * I can see your butt.
 * When the woman in the dress was sitting with her legs up, I could see up her butt.
 * 1)  Body; self.
 * Get your butt to the car.
 * We can't chat today. I have to get my butt to work before I'm late.
 * 1)  A used cigarette.
 * 2) The larger or thicker end of anything; the blunt end, in distinction from the sharp end; as, the butt of a rifle. Formerly also spelled but.
 * 3) A limit; a bound; a goal; the extreme bound; the end.
 * 4) A mark to be shot at; a target.
 * 5) A piece of land left unplowed at the end of a field.
 * 6) A person at whom ridicule, jest, or contempt is directed.
 * He's usually the butt of their jokes.
 * 1) A push, thrust, or sudden blow, given by the head; a head butt.
 * Be careful in the pen, that ram can knock you down with a butt.
 * The hand-cuffed suspect gave the officer a desperate butt in the chest.
 * 1) A thrust in fencing.
 * 2)  The plastic or rubber cap used to cover the open end of a lacrosse stick's shaft in order to prevent injury.
 * 3) The portion of a half-coupling fastened to the end of a hose.
 * 4) The end of a connecting rod or other like piece, to which the boxing is attached by the strap, cotter, and gib.
 * 5)  A joint where the ends of two objects come squarely together without scarfing or chamfering; – also called a butt joint.
 * 6)  A kind of hinge used in hanging doors, etc., so named because it is attached to the inside edge of the door and butts against the casing, instead of on its face, like the strap hinge; also called butt hinge.
 * 7)  The joint where two planks in a strake meet.
 * 8)  The thickest and stoutest part of tanned oxhides, used for soles of boots, harness, trunks.
 * 9) The hut or shelter of the person who attends to the targets in rifle practice.
 * 10)  An English measure of capacity for liquids, containing 126 wine gallons which is one-half tun; equivalent to the pipe.
 * 11) * 1882, James Edwin Thorold Rogers, A History of Agriculture and Prices in England, p. 205.
 * Again, by 28 Hen. VIII, cap. 14, it is re-enacted that the tun of wine should contain 252 gallons, a butt of Malmsey 126 gallons, a pipe 126 gallons, a tercian or puncheon 84 gallons, a hogshead 63 gallons, a tierce 41 gallons, a barrel 31.5 gallons, a rundlet 18.5 gallons. –
 * 1) A wooden cask for storing wine, usually containing 126 gallons.
 * 2) * 1611, William Shakespeare, The Tempest, Act II, Scene II, line 121.
 * ...I escap'd upon a butt of sack which the sailors heav'd o'erboard...
 * 1) Any of various flatfish such as sole, plaice or turbot

Verb

 * 1) To strike bluntly, particularly with the head.