His father is Jack Bush, the grandson of A.J. Bush, founder of the Bush Brothers and Co., best known for Bush's Baked Beans.
Kristian Bush and his Sugarland partner Jennifer Nettles are both 5'8.
George Bush
yes, they are brothers.
I think Carrie has a trimmed bush
The meaning would be the same, but most people say beating around the bush.
Beat around the bush means to discuss something without coming to a point. Ex: Quit beating around the bush and just answer the question!
The cast of Beating Around the Bush - 2006 includes: Brendan Sawyer
One is direct and to the point. The other is beating around the bush.
You use it to mean "stop wasting time and get to the point." If someone is talking about everything except what they need to be talking about, you'd tell them, "Stop beating around the bush."
Beating around the bush means not going straight to the point. It comes from an old hunting term. Beaters were people who went ahead of hunters to flush out the quarry. To those beaters who tried to have an easy day and avoid heavy undergrowth the hunters would call out "don't beat around the bush, go through it. Being evasive and not coming to the point. Avoiding the main topic. Not speaking directly about the issue. Imagine that you are beating a bush with a stick to try to get an animal to run out of it; if you beat all around the bush instead, you won't get the animal to move because you are hitting everywhere except where it is hiding. To not explain directly what someone is asking about.
No. The phrase is "beating around the bush".... it refers to making a noise around a bush to drive a bird out of it, when the simplest way to achieve the result would be to just go into the bush.It is used when someone is delaying or not being as direct as they might be. You would tell them "Stop beating around the bush and just tell me the news," or "He's hiding something; he's just beating around the bush now."
Beating Around the Bush with Dr- Wulfie - 2010 was released on: USA: 3 March 2010
Nothing. Perhaps you are thinking of beating around the bush, which means to avoid the topic of conversation.
Hunters beat around the bush when they want to drive their prey out of cover. They don't jump into the bush (because of its thickness and brambles), but they work around it. So "beating around the bush" was taken as a metaphor for speaking indirectly and not getting to the subject itself.
"Beat around the bush" means to avoid addressing a topic directly or to speak indirectly instead of getting to the point. It refers to not being straightforward in communication.
Beating around the bush would be the synonym.