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blow

blow 1

 (blō)

v. blew (blo͞o), blown (blōn), blow·ing, blows

v.intr.

1.

a. To be in a state of motion. Used of the air or of wind.

b. To move along or be carried by the wind: Her hat blew away.

c. To move with or have strong winds: The storm blew all night.

2.

a. To expel a current of air, as from the mouth or from a bellows.

b. To produce a sound by expelling a current of air, as in sounding a wind instrument or a whistle.

c. To breathe hard; pant.

d. To release air or gas suddenly; burst or explode: The tire blew when it hit the pothole.

e. To spout moist air from the blowhole. Used of a whale.

3.

a. To fail or break down, as from being operated under extreme or improper conditions: The furnace blew during the cold snap.

b. To melt or otherwise become disabled. Used of a fuse.

4.

a. Informal To move very fast in relation to something: The boy blew past the stands on his bike.

b. Slang To go away; depart: It's time to blow.

5. Informal To boast.

6. Vulgar Slang To be disgustingly disagreeable or offensive: This movie blows.

v.tr.

1.

a. To cause to move by means of a current of air: The wind blew the boat out to sea.

b. To drive a current of air on, in, or through: blew my hair dry after I shampooed it.

c. To clear out or make free of obstruction by forcing air through: blew his nose all through allergy season.

d. To shape or form (glass, for example) by forcing air or gas through at the end of a pipe.

2.

a. To expel (air) from the mouth.

b. To cause air or gas to be expelled suddenly from: We blew a tire when we drove over the rock.

3. Music

a. To cause (a wind instrument) to sound.

b. To sound: a bugle blowing taps.

4.

a. To cause to be out of breath.

b. To allow (a winded horse) to regain its breath.

5. To demolish by the force of an explosion: An artillery shell blew our headquarters apart.

6. To lay or deposit eggs in. Used of certain insects.

7.

a. To cause to fail or break down, as by operating at extreme or improper conditions: blew the engine on the last lap.

b. To cause (a fuse) to melt or become disabled.

8. Slang

a. To spend (money) freely and rashly. See Synonyms at waste.

b. To spend money freely on; treat: blew me to a sumptuous dinner.

9.

a. Slang To spoil or lose through ineptitude: blew the audition; blew a three-goal lead. See Synonyms at botch.

b. To cause (a covert intelligence operation or operative) to be revealed and thereby jeopardized: a story in the press that blew their cover; an agent who was blown by the opposition.

10.

a. Slang To depart (a place) in a great hurry: Let's blow this city no later than noon.

b. Baseball To throw (a pitch) so fast that a batter cannot swing fast enough to hit it: blew a fastball by the batter for the strikeout.

11. Vulgar Slang To perform fellatio on.

n.

1. The act or an instance of blowing.

2.

a. A blast of air or wind.

b. A storm.

3. Informal An act of bragging.

4. Slang Cocaine.

Phrasal Verbs:

blow away Slang

1. To kill by shooting, especially with a firearm.

2. To defeat decisively.

3. To affect intensely; overwhelm: That concert blew me away.

blow in Slang

To arrive, especially when unexpected.

blow off

1. To relieve or release (pressure); let off.

2. Slang To choose not to attend or accompany: They wanted us to come along, but we blew them off.

blow out

1. To extinguish or be extinguished by a gust of air: blow out a candle.

2. To fail, as an electrical apparatus.

3. To erupt in an uncontrolled manner. Used of a gas or oil well.

4. To defeat decisively, as in a sport.

blow over

To subside, wane, or pass over with little lasting effect: The storm blew over quickly. The scandal will soon blow over.

blow up

1. To come into being: A storm blew up.

2. To fill with air; inflate: blow up a tire.

3. To enlarge (a photographic image or print).

4. To explode: bombs blowing up.

5. To lose one's temper.

Idioms:

blow a fuse/gasket Slang

To explode with anger.

blow hot and cold

To change one's opinion often on a matter; vacillate.

blow off steam

To give vent to pent-up emotion.

blow (one's) cool Slang

To lose one's composure.

blow (one's) mind Slang

To affect with intense emotion, such as amazement, excitement, or shock.

blow (one's) top/stack Informal

To lose one's temper.

blow/break open

To get a sudden, insurmountable lead in (an athletic contest).

blow out of proportion

To make more of than is reasonable; exaggerate.

blow smoke

1. To speak deceptively.

2. To brag or exaggerate.



blow 2

 (blō)

n.

1. A sudden hard stroke or hit, as with the fist or an object.

2. An unexpected shock or calamity.

3. An unexpected attack; an assault.


[Middle English blaw.]


blow 3

 (blō)

intr. & tr.v. blew (blo͞o), blown (blōn), blow·ing, blows

To bloom or cause to bloom.

n.

1. A mass of blossoms: peach blow.

2. The state of blossoming: tulips in full blow.


[From Middle English blowen, to bloom, from Old English blōwan; see bhel- in Indo-European roots.]

American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

blow

(bləʊ)

vb, blows, blowing, blew or blownpast part blowed

1. (of a current of air, the wind, etc) to be or cause to be in motion

2. (intr) to move or be carried by or as if by wind or air: a feather blew in through the window.

3. to expel (air, cigarette smoke, etc) through the mouth or nose

4. to force or cause (air, dust, etc) to move (into, in, over, etc) by using an instrument or by expelling breath

5. (intr) to breathe hard; pant

6. (sometimes foll by up) to inflate with air or the breath

7. (intr) (of wind, a storm, etc) to make a roaring or whistling sound

8. to cause (a whistle, siren, etc) to sound by forcing air into it, as a signal, or (of a whistle, etc) to sound thus

9. (tr) to force air from the lungs through (the nose) to clear out mucus or obstructing matter

10. (often foll by: up, down, in, etc) to explode, break, or disintegrate completely: the bridge blew down in the gale.

11. (Electronics) electronics to burn out (a fuse, valve, etc) because of excessive current or (of a fuse, valve, etc) to burn out

12. blow a fuse slang to lose one's temper

13. (Zoology) (intr) (of a whale) to spout water or air from the lungs

14. (Horse Training, Riding & Manège) (tr) to wind (a horse) by making it run excessively

15. (Music, other) to cause (a wind instrument) to sound by forcing one's breath into the mouthpiece, or (of such an instrument) to sound in this way

16. (Jazz) (intr) jazz slang to play in a jam session

17. (Zoology) (intr) (of flies) to lay eggs (in)

18. (Crafts) to shape (glass, ornaments, etc) by forcing air or gas through the material when molten

19. (intr) chiefly Scot and Austral and NZ to boast or brag

20. (tr) slang

a. to spend (money) freely

b. US to treat or entertain

21. (tr) slang to use (an opportunity) ineffectively

22. slang to go suddenly away (from)

23. (tr) slang to expose or betray (a person or thing meant to be kept secret)

24. (tr) slang US to inhale (a drug)

25. (intr) slang to masturbate

26. informal another word for damn: I'll be blowed; blow it!.

27. (Chess & Draughts) draughts another word for huff4

28. blow hot and cold to vacillate

29. blow a kiss blow kisses to kiss one's hand, then blow across it as if to carry the kiss through the air to another person

30. blow one's own trumpet to boast of one's own skills or good qualities

31. blow someone's mind slang

a. (of a drug, esp LSD) to alter someone's mental state

b. esp US and Canadian to astound or surprise someone

32. (Recreational Drugs) (of a drug, esp LSD) to alter someone's mental state

33. esp US and Canadian to astound or surprise someone

34. blow one's top esp US and Canadian blow one's stack blow one's lid informal to lose one's temper

n

35. the act or an instance of blowing

36. the sound produced by blowing

37. a blast of air or wind

38. (Metallurgy) metallurgy

a. a stage in the Bessemer process in which air is blasted upwards through molten pig iron

b. the quantity of metal treated in a Bessemer converter

39. (Mining & Quarrying) mining

a. a rush of air into a mine

b. the collapse of a mine roof

40. (Jazz) jazz slang a jam session

41. (Recreational Drugs)

a. Brit a slang name for cannabis2

b. US a slang name for cocaine

[Old English blāwan, related to Old Norse blǣr gust of wind, Old High German blāen, Latin flāre]


blow

(bləʊ)

n

1. a powerful or heavy stroke with the fist, a weapon, etc

2. at one blow at a blow by or with only one action; all at one time

3. a sudden setback; unfortunate event: to come as a blow.

4. come to blows

a. to fight

b. to result in a fight

5. an attacking action: a blow for freedom.

6. Austral and NZ a stroke of the shears in sheep-shearing

[C15: probably of Germanic origin; compare Old High German bliuwan to beat]


blow

(bləʊ)

vb, blows, blowing, blew or blown

1. (Botany) (intr) (of a plant or flower) to blossom or open out

2. (tr) to produce (flowers)

n

3. a mass of blossoms

4. the state or period of blossoming (esp in the phrase in full blow)

[Old English blōwan; related to Old Frisian blōia to bloom, Old High German bluoen, Latin flōs flower; see bloom1]

Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014

blow1

(bloʊ)

n.

1. a sudden, hard stroke with a hand, fist, or weapon.

2. a sudden shock, calamity, reversal, etc.

3. a sudden attack or drastic action.

Idioms:

come to blows, to begin to fight, esp. physically.

[1425–75; late Middle English blaw, N form representing later blowe]

blow2

(bloʊ)

v. blew, blown or, for 24, blowed, blow•ing,
n. v.i.

1. (of the wind or air) to be in motion.

2. to move along, carried by or as if by the wind.

3. to produce or emit a current of air, as with the mouth or a bellows.

4. (of a horn, trumpet, etc.) to give out sound.

5. to make a blowing sound; whistle: The sirens blew at noon.

6. (of horses) to breathe hard or quickly; pant.

7. to boast; brag.

8. (of a whale) to spout.

9. (of a fuse, light bulb, tire, etc.) to stop functioning or be destroyed, as by bursting, exploding, or melting (often fol. by out).

10. Slang. to leave; depart.

v.t.

11. to drive by means of a current of air: A breeze blew dust into my eyes.

12. to drive a current of air upon.

13. to clear or empty by forcing air through: Try blowing your nose.

14. to shape (glass, smoke, etc.) with a current of air.

15. to cause to sound, as by a current of air: to blow a horn.

16. to cause to explode: A mine blew the ship to bits.

17. to cause or undergo the bursting, melting, burning, or disfunctioning of, as by strain or overload (often fol. by out): to blow a tire.

18. to cause to fall or collapse by a current of air; topple or demolish (usu. fol. by down, over, etc.): A windstorm blew down the tent.

19. to spread or make widely known: Growing panic blew the rumor about.

20. Informal.

a. to squander; spend quickly or extravagantly: I blew $100 on dinner.

b. to treat; bear the expense for: I'll blow you to a movie.

21. Informal.

a. to mishandle, ruin, or botch; bungle: You blew your last chance.

b. to waste or lose: The team blew the lead in the third quarter.

22. to damn: Blow the cost! Well, I'll be blowed!

23. to put (a horse) out of breath by fatigue.

24. Slang. to depart from: to blow town.

25. Vulgar Slang. to perform fellatio on.

26. blow away,

a. to kill, esp. by gunfire.

b. to defeat decisively; trounce.

c. to overwhelm with emotion, astonishment, etc.

27. blow in, to arrive at a place, esp. unexpectedly.

28. blow off, to disregard, ignore, or reject: He blew off their meeting.

29. blow out,

a. to extinguish or become extinguished.

b. to lose or cause to lose force or to cease: The storm has blown itself out.

c. (of an oil or gas well) to lose oil or gas uncontrollably.

30. blow over,

a. to pass away; subside: The storm blew over in minutes.

b. to be forgotten: The scandal will blow over eventually.

31. blow up,

a. to explode or cause to explode.

b. to exaggerate; enlarge.

c. to lose one's temper.

d. to fill with air or gas; inflate: to blow up a balloon.

e. to distend or become distended; swell.

f. to make an enlarged reproduction of (a photograph).

g. to come into being: A storm suddenly blew up.

n.

32. a blast of air or wind.

33. a violent windstorm.

34. an act of producing a blast of air, as in playing a wind instrument.

Idioms:

1. blow hot and cold, to favor and then reject something by turns; vacillate.

2. blow off steam, to reduce or release tension, as by loud talking.

3. blow one's cool, to lose one's composure.

4. blow one's cover, to divulge one's secret identity, esp. inadvertently.

5. blow one's mind, to overwhelm one, as with excitement, pleasure, or dismay.

6. blow one's stack or top, to become enraged; lose one's temper.

7. blow the lid off, to expose (scandal or illegal actions) to public view.

[before 1000; Middle English; Old English blāwan; c. Old High German blā(h)an, Latin flāre to blow]

blow3

(bloʊ)

n., v. blew, blown, blow•ing. n.

1. a display of blossoms.

2. the state of blossoming: tulips in full blow.

v.i.

3. Archaic. to blossom; flower.

[before 1000; Middle English; Old English blōwan]

Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.

Blow

 a quantity of steel dealt with at one time in a Bessemer converter, 1881.

Dictionary of Collective Nouns and Group Terms. Copyright 2008 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.

blow


Past participle: blown
Gerund: blowing
Imperative
blow
blow
Present
I blow
you blow
he/she/it blows
we blow
you blow
they blow
Preterite
I blew
you blew
he/she/it blew
we blew
you blew
they blew
Present Continuous
I am blowing
you are blowing
he/she/it is blowing
we are blowing
you are blowing
they are blowing
Present Perfect
I have blown
you have blown
he/she/it has blown
we have blown
you have blown
they have blown
Past Continuous
I was blowing
you were blowing
he/she/it was blowing
we were blowing
you were blowing
they were blowing
Past Perfect
I had blown
you had blown
he/she/it had blown
we had blown
you had blown
they had blown
Future
I will blow
you will blow
he/she/it will blow
we will blow
you will blow
they will blow
Future Perfect
I will have blown
you will have blown
he/she/it will have blown
we will have blown
you will have blown
they will have blown
Future Continuous
I will be blowing
you will be blowing
he/she/it will be blowing
we will be blowing
you will be blowing
they will be blowing
Present Perfect Continuous
I have been blowing
you have been blowing
he/she/it has been blowing
we have been blowing
you have been blowing
they have been blowing
Future Perfect Continuous
I will have been blowing
you will have been blowing
he/she/it will have been blowing
we will have been blowing
you will have been blowing
they will have been blowing
Past Perfect Continuous
I had been blowing
you had been blowing
he/she/it had been blowing
we had been blowing
you had been blowing
they had been blowing
Conditional
I would blow
you would blow
he/she/it would blow
we would blow
you would blow
they would blow
Past Conditional
I would have blown
you would have blown
he/she/it would have blown
we would have blown
you would have blown
they would have blown

Collins English Verb Tables © HarperCollins Publishers 2011

ThesaurusAntonymsRelated WordsSynonymsLegend:

Noun1.blow - a powerful stroke with the fist or a weapon; "a blow on the head"

backhander - a backhanded blow

clip - a sharp slanting blow; "he gave me a clip on the ear"

whang, whack, knock, rap, belt - the act of hitting vigorously; "he gave the table a whack"

thwack - a hard blow with a flat object

smacking, slap, smack - the act of smacking something; a blow delivered with an open hand

smacker - a very powerful blow with the fist

knockdown - a blow that knocks the opponent off his feet

kayo, KO, knockout - a blow that renders the opponent unconscious

swat - a sharp blow

whiplash, lash, whip - a quick blow delivered with a whip or whiplike object; "the whip raised a red welt"

biff, punch, lick, clout, poke, slug - (boxing) a blow with the fist; "I gave him a clout on his nose"

box - a blow with the hand (usually on the ear); "I gave him a good box on the ear"

kick, kicking, boot - the act of delivering a blow with the foot; "he gave the ball a powerful kick"; "the team's kicking was excellent"

stroke - a single complete movement

fighting, combat, fight, scrap - the act of fighting; any contest or struggle; "a fight broke out at the hockey game"; "there was fighting in the streets"; "the unhappy couple got into a terrible scrap"

counterblow - a return blow; a retaliatory blow

swing - a sweeping blow or stroke; "he took a wild swing at my head"

knife thrust, stab, thrust - a strong blow with a knife or other sharp pointed instrument; "one strong stab to the heart killed him"

stinger - a sharp stinging blow

thump - a heavy blow with the hand

uppercut - a swinging blow directed upward (especially at an opponent's chin)

hammering, pounding, hammer, pound - the act of pounding (delivering repeated heavy blows); "the sudden hammer of fists caught him off guard"; "the pounding of feet on the hallway"

shot - a blow hard enough to cause injury; "he is still recovering from a shot to his leg"; "I caught him with a solid shot to the chin"

wallop - a severe blow

2.blow - an impact (as from a collision); "the bump threw him off the bicycle"

impact - the striking of one body against another

jolt, jounce, jar, shock - a sudden jarring impact; "the door closed with a jolt"; "all the jars and jolts were smoothed out by the shock absorbers"

concussion - any violent blow

rap, tap, strike - a gentle blow

bang, bash, smash, knock, belt - a vigorous blow; "the sudden knock floored him"; "he took a bash right in his face"; "he got a bang on the head"

buffeting, pounding - repeated heavy blows

sideswipe - a glancing blow from or on the side of something (especially motor vehicles)

slap, smack - a blow from a flat object (as an open hand)

3.blow - an unfortunate happening that hinders or impedesblow - an unfortunate happening that hinders or impedes; something that is thwarting or frustrating

happening, natural event, occurrence, occurrent - an event that happens

whammy - a serious or devastating setback

4.blow - an unpleasant or disappointing surprise; "it came as a shock to learn that he was injured"

surprise - a sudden unexpected event

blip - a sudden minor shock or meaningless interruption; "the market had one bad blip today"; "you can't react to the day-to-day blips"; "renewed jitters in the wake of a blip in retail sales"

5.blow - a strong current of airblow - a strong current of air; "the tree was bent almost double by the gust"

bluster - a violent gusty wind

sandblast - a blast of wind laden with sand

puff, puff of air, whiff - a short light gust of air

air current, current of air, wind - air moving (sometimes with considerable force) from an area of high pressure to an area of low pressure; "trees bent under the fierce winds"; "when there is no wind, row"; "the radioactivity was being swept upwards by the air current and out into the atmosphere"

6.blow - street names for cocaine

cocain, cocaine - a narcotic (alkaloid) extracted from coca leaves; used as a surface anesthetic or taken for pleasure; can become powerfully addictive

7.blow - forceful exhalation through the nose or mouth; "he gave his nose a loud blow"; "he blew out all the candles with a single puff"

breathing out, exhalation, expiration - the act of expelling air from the lungs

insufflation - an act of blowing or breathing on or into something

Verb1.blow - exhale hard; "blow on the soup to cool it down"

breathe out, exhale, expire - expel air; "Exhale when you lift the weight"

gasp, pant, puff, heave - breathe noisily, as when one is exhausted; "The runners reached the finish line, panting heavily"

chuff, huff, puff - blow hard and loudly; "he huffed and puffed as he made his way up the mountain"

insufflate - blow or breathe hard on or into

2.blow - be blowing or storming; "The wind blew from the West"

breeze - blow gently and lightly; "It breezes most evenings at the shore"

set in - blow toward the shore; "That gale could set in on us with the next high tide"

waft - blow gently; "A breeze wafted through the door"

storm - blow hard; "It was storming all night"

squall - blow in a squall; "When it squalls, a prudent sailor reefs his sails"

bluster - blow hard; be gusty, as of wind; "A southeaster blustered onshore"; "The flames blustered"

3.blow - free of obstruction by blowing air through; "blow one's nose"

eject, expel, release, exhaust, discharge - eliminate (a substance); "combustion products are exhausted in the engine"; "the plant releases a gas"

4.blow - be in motion due to some air or water currentblow - be in motion due to some air or water current; "The leaves were blowing in the wind"; "the boat drifted on the lake"; "The sailboat was adrift on the open sea"; "the shipwrecked boat drifted away from the shore"

go, locomote, move, travel - change location; move, travel, or proceed, also metaphorically; "How fast does your new car go?"; "We travelled from Rome to Naples by bus"; "The policemen went from door to door looking for the suspect"; "The soldiers moved towards the city in an attempt to take it before night fell"; "news travelled fast"

float - move lightly, as if suspended; "The dancer floated across the stage"

waft - be driven or carried along, as by the air; "Sounds wafted into the room"

tide - be carried with the tide

drift - cause to be carried by a current; "drift the boats downstream"

stream - to extend, wave or float outward, as if in the wind; "their manes streamed like stiff black pennants in the wind"

5.blow - make a sound as if blown; "The whistle blew"

blow - play or sound a wind instrument; "She blew the horn"

sound, go - make a certain noise or sound; "She went `Mmmmm'"; "The gun went `bang'"

6.blow - shape by blowing; "Blow a glass vase"

shape, form - give shape or form to; "shape the dough"; "form the young child's character"

7.blow - make a mess of, destroy or ruinblow - make a mess of, destroy or ruin; "I botched the dinner and we had to eat out"; "the pianist screwed up the difficult passage in the second movement"

go wrong, miscarry, fail - be unsuccessful; "Where do today's public schools fail?"; "The attempt to rescue the hostages failed miserably"

8.blow - spend thoughtlessly; throw away; "He wasted his inheritance on his insincere friends"; "You squandered the opportunity to get and advanced degree"

expend, use - use up, consume fully; "The legislature expended its time on school questions"

blow - spend lavishly or wastefully on; "He blew a lot of money on his new home theater"

burn - spend (significant amounts of money); "He has money to burn"

9.blow - spend lavishly or wastefully on; "He blew a lot of money on his new home theater"

expend, spend, drop - pay out; "spend money"

squander, waste, blow - spend thoughtlessly; throw away; "He wasted his inheritance on his insincere friends"; "You squandered the opportunity to get and advanced degree"

10.blow - sound by having air expelled through a tube; "The trumpets blew"

blow - play or sound a wind instrument; "She blew the horn"

sound, go - make a certain noise or sound; "She went `Mmmmm'"; "The gun went `bang'"

11.blow - play or sound a wind instrument; "She blew the horn"

blow - make a sound as if blown; "The whistle blew"

blow - sound by having air expelled through a tube; "The trumpets blew"

sound - cause to sound; "sound the bell"; "sound a certain note"

12.blow - provide sexual gratification through oral stimulation

excite, stir, stimulate - stir feelings in; "stimulate my appetite"; "excite the audience"; "stir emotions"

13.blow - cause air to go in, on, or through; "Blow my hair dry"

send, direct - cause to go somewhere; "The explosion sent the car flying in the air"; "She sent her children to camp"; "He directed all his energies into his dissertation"

blast - apply a draft or strong wind to to; "the air conditioning was blasting cold air at us"

14.blow - cause to move by means of an air current; "The wind blew the leaves around in the yard"

move, displace - cause to move or shift into a new position or place, both in a concrete and in an abstract sense; "Move those boxes into the corner, please"; "I'm moving my money to another bank"; "The director moved more responsibilities onto his new assistant"

whiff - drive or carry as if by a puff of air; "The gust of air whiffed away the clouds"

15.blow - spout moist air from the blowhole; "The whales blew"

gush, spirt, spout, spurt - gush forth in a sudden stream or jet; "water gushed forth"

16.blow - leave; informal or rude; "shove off!"; "The children shoved along"; "Blow now!"

depart, go away, go - move away from a place into another direction; "Go away before I start to cry"; "The train departs at noon"

17.blow - lay eggs; "certain insects are said to blow"

lay, put down, repose - put in a horizontal position; "lay the books on the table"; "lay the patient carefully onto the bed"

18.blow - cause to be revealed and jeopardized; "The story blew their cover"; "The double agent was blown by the other side"

disclose, let on, divulge, expose, give away, let out, reveal, unwrap, discover, bring out, break - make known to the public information that was previously known only to a few people or that was meant to be kept a secret; "The auction house would not disclose the price at which the van Gogh had sold"; "The actress won't reveal how old she is"; "bring out the truth"; "he broke the news to her"; "unwrap the evidence in the murder case"

19.blow - show offblow - show off        

puff - speak in a blustering or scornful manner; "A puffing kind of man"

exaggerate, hyperbolise, hyperbolize, overstate, amplify, magnify, overdraw - to enlarge beyond bounds or the truth; "tended to romanticize and exaggerate this `gracious Old South' imagery"

crow, gloat, triumph - dwell on with satisfaction

20.blow - allow to regain its breath; "blow a horse"

rest - give a rest to; "He rested his bad leg"; "Rest the dogs for a moment"

21.blow - melt, break, or become otherwise unusable; "The lightbulbs blew out"; "The fuse blew"

conk out, go bad, break down, die, fail, give out, give way, break, go - stop operating or functioning; "The engine finally went"; "The car died on the road"; "The bus we travelled in broke down on the way to town"; "The coffee maker broke"; "The engine failed on the way to town"; "her eyesight went after the accident"

22.blow - burst suddenly; "The tire blew"; "We blew a tire"

burst, break open, split - come open suddenly and violently, as if from internal pressure; "The bubble burst"

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.

blow

1

verb

1. gust, blast, puff A chill wind blew at the top of the hill.

2. move, carry, drive, bear, sweep, toss, fling, whisk, buffet, whirl, waft The wind blew her hair back from her forehead.

3. be carried, move, travel, flow, float, hover, flutter, whirl, waft, flit, flitter Leaves were blowing around in the wind.

8. blast Rival gunmen blew the city to bits.

10. (Informal) ruin, spoil, screw up (informal), botch, mess up, cock up (Brit. slang), fuck up (offensive taboo slang), make a mess of, muff, foul up, make a nonsense of (informal), bodge (informal), make a pig's ear of (informal), flub (U.S. slang), louse up (slang) Oh you fool! Now you've really blown your chances!

blow someone away

blow something up

4. magnify, increase, extend, stretch, expand, widen, broaden, lengthen, amplify, elongate, dilate, make larger The image is blown up on a large screen.

blow up

2. (Informal) lose your temper, rage, erupt, lose it (informal), crack up (informal), see red (informal), lose the plot (informal), become angry, go ballistic (slang, chiefly U.S.), hit the roof (informal), blow a fuse (slang, chiefly U.S.), fly off the handle (informal), become enraged, go off the deep end (informal), wig out (slang), go up the wall (slang), go crook (Austral. & N.Z. slang), flip your lid (slang) I'm sorry I blew up at you.

blow your top (Informal) lose your temper, explode, blow up (informal), lose it (informal), see red (informal), lose the plot (informal), have a fit (informal), throw a tantrum, fly off the handle (informal), go spare (Brit. slang), fly into a temper, flip your lid (slang), do your nut (Brit. slang) I just asked him why he was late and he blew his top.


blow

2

noun

1. knock, stroke, punch, belt (informal), bang, rap, bash (informal), sock (slang), smack, thump, buffet, clout (informal), whack, wallop (informal), slosh (Brit. slang), tonk (informal), clump (slang), clomp (slang) He went off to hospital after a blow to the face.

2. setback, shock, upset, disaster, reverse, disappointment, catastrophe, misfortune, jolt, bombshell, calamity, affliction, whammy (informal, chiefly U.S.), choker (informal), sucker punch, bummer (slang), bolt from the blue, comedown (informal) The ruling comes as a blow to environmentalists.

Collins Thesaurus of the English Language – Complete and Unabridged 2nd Edition. 2002 © HarperCollins Publishers 1995, 2002

blow 1

verb

1. To be in a state of motion, as air:

3. To come open or fly apart suddenly and violently, as from internal pressure.Also used with out:

4. To release or cause to release energy suddenly and violently, especially with a loud noise.Also used with up:

5. Informal. To talk with excessive pride:

6. Slang. To move or proceed away from a place:

7. Slang. To spend (money) excessively and usually foolishly:

8. Slang. To pay for the food, drink, or entertainment of (another):

Idiom: stand treat.

9. Slang. To harm irreparably through inept handling; make a mess:

Idiom: make a muck of.

phrasal verb
blow in

Slang. To come to a particular place:

phrasal verb
blow upnoun

1. A natural movement or current of air:

2. Informal. An act of boasting:


blow 2

noun

1. A sudden sharp, powerful stroke:

2. Something that jars the mind or emotions:


blow 3

verb

The American Heritage® Roget's Thesaurus. Copyright © 2013, 2014 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

Translations

يَنْفُخُيَنْفُخُ، يَصْفُرُيَهُبُيَهُبُّ، يَعْصِفُصَدْمَةٌ، كارِثَةٌ

foukatúdervanoutvátzatroubit

blæsepusteslagsprænge

iskupuhaltaaräjähtääsuihkuttaatakaisku

puhatiudarac

fúj

áfallblásafeykjafjúkahögg

・・・に息を吐く吹く強打

강타불다

aizpūstiepūstlikteņa trieciensnopūstpūst

odfúknuťpribuchnúť

pihatipihnitirazstrelitiudarecupihniti

blåsaslag

เป่าถูกต่อยพัด

thổibayđòn đánhnổtẽn

blow

1 [bləʊ] N


blow

2 [bləʊ] (blew (pt) (blown (pp)))

D. CPD blow drier Nsecador m de pelo
blow job Nmamada f
to give sb a blow jobmamársela or chupársela a algn

blow about

blow away

B. VT + ADV

1. [wind] [+ leaves, rubbish] → hacer volar

blow down

blow in VI + ADV

blow off

blow out

B. VI + ADV

2. [tyre] → reventar; [window] → romperse (con la fuerza del viento etc)

blow over

B. VI + ADV

1. [tree etc] → caer

blow up

A. VT + ADV

1. (= explode) [+ bridge etc] → volar

3. (= enlarge) [+ photo] → ampliar

5. (= reprimand) the boss blew the boy upel jefe puso al chico como un trapo

Collins Spanish Dictionary - Complete and Unabridged 8th Edition 2005 © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1971, 1988 © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2005

blow

[ˈbləʊ]

n (physical, emotional)coup m
to come to blows → en venir aux mains
to strike a blow for sth → rompre une lance pour qch
to be a blow to sth → être un coup pour qch
to soften the blow, to cushion the blow → amortir le choc

vb [blew] [ˈbluː] (pt) [blown] [ˈbləʊn] (pp)

vt

[wind] [+ sand, smoke, rain] → souffler

(= destroy) [+ chance] → gâcher
you've blown it! → tu as tout gaché!

to blow sth to bits (with explosives)réduire qch en miettes

vt sep

[+ window] → briser

blow over

vi [trouble, argument] → passer
The matter quickly blew over
BUT L'affaire fut vite oubliée.

blow up

vt

(= inflate) [+ balloon, tyre] → gonfler

(= enlarge) [+ image, photo] → agrandirblow-by-blow adj [account, commentary] → minutieux/euse, détaillé(e)blow-dry

Collins English/French Electronic Resource. © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

blow

:


blow

:


blow

:

blowpipe

n

(Tech) → Gebläsebrenner m, → Lötrohr nt

(for glassmaking) → Glasbläserpfeife f


blow

:

blow-up

n

(inf, = row) → Krach m; they’ve had a blowsie hatten Krach


blow

1


blow

2 vb: pret <blew>, ptp <blown>

vt

(= make by blowing) glass, smoke ringsblasen; bubblesmachen

trumpetblasen; (Hunt, Mil) hornblasen in (+acc); the referee blew his whistleder Schiedsrichter pfiff; to blow one’s own trumpet (Brit) or horn (US) (fig)sein eigenes Lob singen

(inf: = spend extravagantly) moneyverpulvern (inf)

(Brit inf: = damn) blow!Mist! (inf); blow this rain!dieser mistige Regen! (inf); blow the expense/what he likes!das ist doch wurscht, was es kostet/was er will (inf); well, I’ll be blowedMensch(enskind)! (inf); I’ll be blowed if I’ll do itich denke nicht im Traum dran(, das zu tun) (inf); … and blow me if he still didn’t forget… und er hat es trotzdem glatt vergessen (inf)

(inf) to blow one’s chances of doing somethinges sich (dat)verscherzen, etw zu tun; I think I’ve blown itich glaube, ich habs versaut (inf)

Collins German Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged 7th Edition 2005. © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1980 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1997, 1999, 2004, 2005, 2007

blow

1 [bləʊ] n (gen) → colpo; (with fist) → pugno
a blow with a hammer → un colpo di martello
at one blow → in un colpo (solo)
to come to blows → venire alle mani
the news came as a great blow to her → la notizia fu un duro colpo per lei


blow

2 [bləʊ] (blew (vb: pt) (blown (pp)))

2. vi

b. (make sound, trumpet) → suonare
the referee blew his whistle → l'arbitro fischiò

blow away

blow down

blow in vi + adv (window) → sfasciarsi; (enter, leaves, dust) → volar dentro
look who's just blown in! (fam) → ma guarda chi è arrivato!

blow off

blow out

blow over

blow up

Collins Italian Dictionary 1st Edition © HarperCollins Publishers 1995

blow1

(bləu) noun

1. a stroke or knock. a blow on the head.

2. a sudden misfortune. Her husband's death was a real blow.


blow2

(bləu) past tense blew (blu) : past participle blown verb

1. (of a current of air) to be moving. The wind blew more strongly.

2. (of eg wind) to cause (something) to move in a given way. The explosion blew off the lid.

3. to be moved by the wind etc. The door must have blown shut.

4. to drive air (upon or into). Please blow into this tube!

5. to make a sound by means of (a musical instrument etc). He blew the horn loudly.

ˈblowhole noun

a breathing-hole (through the ice for seals etc) or a nostril (especially on the head of a whale etc).

ˈblow-lamp, ˈblow-torch noun

a lamp for aiming a very hot flame at a particular spot. The painter burned off the old paint with a blow-lamp.

ˈblowout noun

1. the bursting of a car tyre. That's the second blowout I've had with this car.

2. (on eg an oil rig) a violent escape of gas etc.

ˈblowpipe noun

a tube from which a dart (often poisonous) is blown.

blow one's top

to become very angry. She blew her top when he arrived home late.

blow out

to extinguish or put out (a flame etc) by blowing. The wind blew out the candle; The child blew out the match.

blow over

to pass and become forgotten. The trouble will soon blow over.

blow up

1. to break into pieces, or be broken into pieces, by an explosion. The bridge blew up / was blown up.

2. to fill with air or a gas. He blew up the balloon.

3. to lose one's temper. If he says that again I'll blow up.

Kernerman English Multilingual Dictionary © 2006-2013 K Dictionaries Ltd.

blow

لَطْمَة, يَنْفُخُ, يَهُبُ foukat, úder blæse, puste, slag blasen, Schlag κτύπημα, φυσάω, φυσώ golpe, soplar isku, puhaltaa coup, souffler puhati, udarac colpo, soffiare ・・・に息を吐く, 吹く, 強打 강타, 불다 blazen, klap blåse, slag dmuchać, dmuchnąć, dmuchnięcie pancada, soprar, sopro дуть, удар blåsa, slag เป่า, ถูกต่อย, พัด darbe, esmek, üflemek đòn đánh, thổi , 拳打, 风吹

Multilingual Translator © HarperCollins Publishers 2009

blow

n. golpe;

vt. soplar,

to ___ one's nosesoplarse, sonarse la nariz;

to give a ___golpear.

English-Spanish Medical Dictionary © Farlex 2012

blow

n golpe m; psychological — golpe psicológico; vt, vi (pret blew; pp blown) soplar; Blow as hard as you can..Sople lo más fuerte que pueda; to — one’s nose sonarse la nariz, soplarse la nariz (Carib)

English-Spanish/Spanish-English Medical Dictionary Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.