Boudiné, m. (familiar), swell, or “masher.” At the time the expression came into use, dandies sported tight or horsey-looking clothes, which imparted to the wearer some vague resemblance with a boudin, or large sausage. For list of synonymous expressions, see [Gommeux].
Boudins, m. pl. (popular), fat fingers and hands.
Boueux, m. (popular), scavenger.
Bouffard, m. (popular), smoker.
Bouffarde, f. (popular), pipe, or “cutty.”
Bouffarder (popular), to smoke, to “blow a cloud.”
Bouffardière, f. (popular), an estaminet, that is, a café where smoking is allowed; chimney.
Bouffe, f. (popular), box on the ear, “buckhorse.”
Bouffe-la-Balle, m., gormandizer, or “stodger;” man with a fat, puffed-up, dumpling face.
Bouffer (military), la botte, to be bamboozled by a woman, in what circumstances it is needless to say. (Popular) Bouffer, to eat. Se —— le nez, to fight.