Definition, Meaning & Anagrams | English word BUF


BUF

Definitions of BUF

  1. (fascism) Initialism of British Union of Fascists. (A political group of the 1930s.)
  2. (sports) Abbreviation of Buffalo.

2
FBU
FUB

Number of letters

3

Is palindrome

No

1
BU

261

363

8
BF
BU
BUF
FB
FBU
FU
FUB
UB

Examples of Using BUF in a Sentence

  • He founded the British Union of Fascists (BUF) in 1932 and led it until its forced disbandment in 1940.
  • The British Union of Fascists (BUF) had advertised a march to take place on Sunday 4 October 1936, the fourth anniversary of their organisation.
  • The British Union of Fascists (BUF) was a British fascist political party formed in 1932 by Oswald Mosley.
  • Special effects supervisors David Yardley and Fred Raimondi, as well as the companies Pixel Envy (headed by the Brothers Strause) and BUF come in third place, with four nominations apiece.
  • After the IFL turned down a merger with the British Union of Fascists in 1932, due to policy differences, the BUF mounted a campaign against the IFL, physically breaking up its meetings and fabricating phony plans that showed the IFL planning to attack the BUF's headquarters, which were passed on to the British government.
  • Although the fasces was utilized almost exclusively by Benito Mussolini's Blackshirts, the BUF claimed that they had a right to use the symbol on the basis that the fasces was used extensively in Britain during Roman times, and that the British Empire continued to carry on the tradition of civilisation from them.
  • Alongside this, as was the case for most rival groups on the far right, the BUF Blackshirts saw the NSL as enemies and were known to attack their rallies and meetings.
  • After initial successes, the BUF began to founder and to devolve into two factions, a militarist one led by Neil Francis Hawkins and F.
  • Brenton Harrison Tarrant, the Australian-born perpetrator of the Christchurch mosque shootings at Al Noor Mosque and Linwood Islamic Centre in Christchurch, New Zealand, was an admitted fascist who admired Oswald Mosley, the leader of the British fascist organization British Union of Fascists (BUF), who is also quoted in the shooter's manifesto The Great Replacement (named after the French far-right theory of the same name).
  • The Union Movement, a re-founded version of the BUF that played a pivotal role in developing the Europeanist outlook of neo-fascism through its Europe a Nation campaign.
  • Besson wanted a photorealistic environment, and BUF initially used microlenses to film physical environments, but eventually instead used photogrammetry, where a digitized photograph of a real object is manipulated with a computer.
  • Thomson was sent to Spain in 1949 to try to build up support for Mosley in the country, but the trip was somewhat unsuccessful as he failed to impress the falangists and had to contend with the negative words of former BUF member Angus Macnab, who had grown to loathe Mosley.
  • Moreover, the seizure of power in Norway by Vidkun Quisling was a matter of concern; Quisling's career was superficially similar to that of BUF leader Oswald Mosley.
  • Hancock formed part of a three-man leadership team in the RPS who came from the BUF, alongside Ted Budden and Jimmy Doyle.
  • As a broadly documented resource in the VFX domain, BUF has been integral to numerous publications, textbooks, industry reference books and manuals, including The Animation Business Handbook, Rendering with mental ray, Monte Carlo and Quasi-Monte Carlo Methods 2004, Cyberarts 2000: International Compendium Prix Ars Electronica, Comic Art of Europe Through 2000: An International Bibliography.
  • After his death, the BUF government abolishes the monarchy and places the Royal Family under house arrest in Balmoral Castle until they are expatriated to Switzerland in September 1939.
  • In the early 1930s, Tremlett was a member of the British Union of Fascists (BUF), serving as Oswald Mosley's deputy director of publications and as the editor of BUF's newspapers Fascist Week and The Blackshirt.
  • After his death, the BUF government abolishes the monarchy and places the Royal Family under house arrest in Balmoral Castle until they are expatriated to Switzerland in September 1939.
  • A witness at Joyce's second marriage, Macnab joined the British Union of Fascists (BUF) and worked in the party's Propaganda Department, editing the party journal, Fascist Quarterly and contributing a weekly antisemitic column, 'Jolly Judah', to its newspaper, The Blackshirt.
  • Other Macedonian organizations were soon established by emigrants from Zagorichani (Vassiliada), Oshtima (Trigonon), Smardesh (Krystallopigi), Gabresh (Gavros), Banitsa (Vevi), Buf (Akritas) and Tarsie (Trivuno), all villages in Aegean Macedonia.



Search for BUF in:






Page preparation took: 226.45 ms.