a. [ L. bucca cheek: cf. F. buccal. ] (Anat.) Of or pertaining to the mouth or cheeks. [ 1913 Webster ]
v. t. [ F. boucaner. See Buccaneer. ] To expose (meat) in strips to fire and smoke upon a buccan. [ Webster 1913 Suppl. ]
n. [ F. boucan. See Buccaneer. ]
v. i. To act the part of a buccaneer; to live as a piratical adventurer or sea robber. [ 1913 Webster ]
n. [ F. boucanier, fr. boucaner to smoke or broil meat and fish, to hunt wild beasts for their skins, boucan a smoking place for meat or fish, gridiron for smoking: a word of American origin. ] A robber upon the sea; a pirate; -- a term applied especially to the piratical adventurers who made depredations on the Spaniards in America in the 17th and 18th centuries.
☞ Primarily, one who dries and smokes flesh or fish after the manner of the Indians. The name was first given to the French settlers in Haiti or Hispaniola, whose business was to hunt wild cattle and swine. [ 1913 Webster ]
a. Like a buccaneer; piratical. [ 1913 Webster ]
a. [ L. bucina a crooked horn or trumpet. ] Shaped or sounding like a trumpet; trumpetlike. [ 1913 Webster ]
‖n. [ L., a trumpeter, fr. bucinare to sound the trumpet. ] (Anat.) A muscle of the cheek; -- so called from its use in blowing wind instruments. [ 1913 Webster ]
a. [ Buccinum + -oid. ] (Zool.) Resembling the genus
‖prop. n. [ L., a trumpet, a trumpet shell. ] (Zool.) A genus of large univalve mollusks abundant in the arctic seas. It includes the common whelk (Buccinum undatum). [ 1913 Webster ]