a-blow teriminin İngilizce İngilizce sözlükte anlamı
- ablow
- Blossoming, blooming, in blossom
against the green, yet, growing in tilled soil, grow stronger and taller than any daffodil can grow in turf : hundreds of them are ablow together, and the very robustness of their splendour.
- ablow
- Blowing or being blown
- blow
- To make a sound as the result of being blown
In the harbor, the ships' horns blew.
- blow
- Cocaine
- blow
- A mass or display of flowers; a yield
Such a blow of tulips.
- blow
- Cannabis
- blow
- To recklessly squander
We blew an opportunity to get benign corporate sponsorship.
- blow
- To propel by an air current
Blow the dust off that book and open it up.
- blow
- A bloom, state of flowering
roses in full blow.
- blow
- An unfortunate occurrence
A further blow to the group came in 1917 when Thomson died while canoeing in Algonquin Park.
- blow
- To explode
Get away from that burning gas tank! It's about to blow!.
- blow
- A chance to catch one’s breath
The players were able to get a blow during the last timeout.
- blow
- A strong wind
We're having a bit of a blow this afternoon.
- blow
- To be propelled by an air current
The leaves blow through the streets in the fall.
- blow
- To exhale visibly through the spout the seawater which it has taken in while feeding
There she blows! (i.e. I see a whale spouting!).
- blow
- To create or shape by blowing; as in to blow bubbles, to blow glass
- blow
- To cause to make sound by blowing, as a musical instrument
- blow
- To leave
Let's blow this joint.
- blow
- To suddenly fail destructively
He tried to sprint, but his ligaments blew and he was barely able to walk to the finish line.
- blow
- To cause sudden destruction of
He blew the tires and the engine.
- blow
- To fellate
Who did you have to blow to get those backstage passes?.
- blow
- To blossom; to cause to bloom or blossom
How blows the citron grove.
- blow
- To cause to explode, shatter, or be utterly destroyed
The aerosol can was blown to bits.
- blow
- To be very undesirable (see also suck)
This blows!.
- blow
- A display of anything brilliant or bright
- blow
- To produce an air current
Blow, winds, and crack your cheeks! rage! blow!.
- blow
- The act of striking or hitting
During an exchange to end round 13, Duran landed a blow to the mid-section.
- blow a backsight
- To occupy a point, then enter the wrong point for the backsight, or forget to enter the backsight
- blow a fuse
- To lose one's temper; to become enraged
When he learned that his daughter had eloped, he blew a fuse.
- blow a fuse
- To cause fuse (or circuit-breaker) to sacrifice itself by overloading the circuit it protects
- blow a gasket
- To cause the seal made by a gasket to fail
- blow a gasket
- To become very angry or upset
The father blew a gasket when he saw his son's poor report card.
- blow a kiss
- To kiss one's hand, then blow on the hand in a direction towards the recipient
We haven't yet kissed, but she blew me a kiss as the train pulled out of the station. That meant a lot to me.
- blow away
- To flabbergast; to impress greatly
The critics were blown away by their latest album.
- blow away
- To kill (someone) by shooting them
The kid just blew the clerk away.
- blow away
- To cause to go away by blowing
He blew away the dust which had collected on the book.
- blow away
- To disperse or to depart on currents of air
I didn't have to rake. The leaves just blew away.
- blow chunks
- To be very bad, inadequate, unpleasant, or miserable; to thoroughly suck
The old version was okay, but the new version blows chunks.
- blow chunks
- To suffer from explosive diarrhea
- blow chunks
- To vomit chunks of undigested food
- blow down
- To knock over from wind
I'll huff and I'll puff and I'll blow your house down.
- blow dryer
- Alternative spelling of blow-dryer
- blow dryers
- plural form of blow dryer
- blow football
- An indoor tabletop game, normally for children, simulating football (soccer), in which plastic straws are blown through in order to move a small ball and score goals
- blow hot and cold
- To behave inconsistently; to vacillate or to waver, as between extremes of opinion or emotion
The Xinhua commentary said that Chen blows hot and cold, behaves capriciously and is a hard man to trust..
- blow it
- to fail at something; to mess up; to make a mistake
I blew it and forgot to start the spaghetti, so I had plenty of sauce and no pasta.
- blow off
- To vent, usually, to reduce pressure in a container
The radioactivity was released when they blew off steam from the containment vessel.
- blow off
- To shoot something with a gun, causing it to come disconnected
Her leg was blown off by a landmine.
- blow off
- to pass gas; to break wind
- blow off
- to shirk or disregard (a duty or person)
We've both been blowing off Peter all day: he's really boring.
- blow off steam
- To rant or shout in order to relieve stress; to vent
Don’t take it personally when he shouts like that. He’s just blowing off steam.
- blow one's cool
- Alternative form of lose one's cool
- blow one's nose
- To expel mucus or other matter from one’s nasal passages, via one’s nostril, by force of lung power
- blow one's top
- to be explosively angry. To lose one's temper
When my dad found out I had failed the exams, he just blew his top.
- blow out
- To deflate quickly on being punctured
The tire blew out on a corner.
- blow out
- To extinguish something, especially a flame
He blew out the match.
- blow out
- In a sporting contest, to dominate and defeat an opposing team, especially by a large scoring margin
The No. 1-rated football team proceeded to blow out its undermanned opponent.
- blow out of proportion
- To overreact to or overstate; to treat too seriously or be overly concerned with
I don't think we need to blow it out of proportion. There's a problem, and we should fix it.
- blow over
- To blow on something causing it to topple
The wind blow over the pole.
- blow over
- To pass naturally; to go away; to settle or calm down
You cannot simply wait for a problem like that to blow over.
- blow smoke
- To speak with a lack of credibility, sense, purpose, or truth; to speak nonsense
Are these statistics they cite verifiable, or are they just blowing smoke, trying to scare people?.
- blow smoke up someone's ass
- Alternative form of blow smoke
- blow someone out of the water
- To trounce; to defeat someone thoroughly, at a game or in battle
With a garden hose, you can blow your opponent out of the water, if he only has a squirt gun.
- blow someone's mind
- To astonish someone, to flabbergast someone
- blow the whistle
- To disclose information to the public or to appropriate authorities concerning the illegal or socially harmful actions of a person or group, especially a corporation or government agency
In some jurisdictions, it is illegal to fire a person for blowing the whistle on an employer.
- blow the whistle
- To make a piercing sound which signals a referee's action or the end of a game
- blow this for a game of soldiers
- Expressing exasperation or impatience with a situation
- blow this pop stand
- To exit or remove oneself from a less than exciting location or environment
I'm bored out of my mind, let's blow this pop stand.
- blow this popsicle stand
- To leave an establishment speedily
Well, we've been at this bar for two hours; let's blow this popsicle stand and go to the nightclub.
- blow up
- To fail disastrously
- blow up
- To suddenly get very angry
Dad blew up at me when I told him I was pregnant.
- blow up
- To explode something or somebody or destroy something or injure or kill somebody by explosion
More civilians than soldiers have been blown up by anti-personnel mines.
- blow up
- To inflate or fill with air
Blow up the balloons.
- blow up
- To become popular very quickly
This album is about to blow up; they’re being promoted on MTV.
- blow up
- To enlarge or zoom in
Blow up the picture to get a better look at their faces.
- blow up
- To explode or be destroyed by explosion
Why do cars in movies always blow up when they fall off a cliff?.
- blow up in one's face
- To fail disastrously
If I took the risk to speak with my friend and the whole thing blew up in my face, I'd probably feel ashamed and exposed whenever I thought about it for a very, very long time.
- blow-by
- in an internal combustion engine, any burnt or unburnt matter escaping from the cylinder, past the (worn) rings on the piston, and into the crankcase
- blow-by-blow
- Detailing every action or occurrence completely
He gave a blow-by-blow account of the entire trip.
- blow-by-blow
- An account, description, or commentary including every detail of the action or event
The media published a blow-by-blow of the trial as it happened.
- blow-dried
- Being or appearing well-groomed but superficial or vacuous
- blow-dried
- Simple past tense and past participle of blow-dry
- blow-dry
- To dry with a hair dryer
- blow-dry
- An instance of blow-drying
She went to the hairdresser's for a haircut, shampooing and a blow-dry.
- blow-dryer
- An electrical device used for drying hair
- blow-up
- Inflatable; able to be blown up
The kids played with blow-up sea-monster in the pool.
- blow-up
- An enlargement (e.g. of a photo)
Make a blow-up of the chart so we have more room to draw on it.
- blow-up
- An explosion (physical or emotional)
I heard Jen's blow-up from the next room.
- by-blow
- A blow struck to the side or from the side, as in swordplay; a secondary or incidental strike of any sort
Either commander took speedy advantage of it—Hopton to make a swift diversion into Sussex and capture Arundel Castle (which was but a by-blow, for in a few weeks he had lost it again).
- by-blow
- An illegitimate child; a child of an unknown or unmarried father
The best hope has been that friends and family would talk, a hope partly realized in this discreet but perceptive memoir by his illegitimate daughter. . . . Little Mary was a by-blow and an inconvenience.
- low blow
- A rhetorical attack that is considered unfair or unscrupulous
- low blow
- An unfair or illegal blow that lands below the opponent’s waist; a groin attack
- whistle blow
- Alternative form of blow the whistle
- blow off
- come off due to an explosion or other strong force
- blow
- To spout water, etc
- blow away
- (Slang) kill; amaze (e.g.: "He blew my mind with his story")
- blow job
- fellatio, oral sex performed on a male (Vulgar Slang)
- blow job
- the practice of touching a man's sexual organs with your lips and tongue to give him sexual pleasure
- blow the whistle
- cause an action or situation to stop by revealing it to opposing parties; blow a whistle to indicate the start or finish of a game or a time-out in an activity
- blow to bits
- Explode someone or something into tiny pieces
- blow to pieces
- Explode someone or something into tiny pieces
- blow to smithereens
- Explode someone or something into tiny pieces
- blow
- {v} to make a current of air, impel by wind, move as air, pant, sound with wind, blossom, swell, deposit an egg as a fly
- blow
- {n} a stroke, misfortune, gale of wind, egg of a fly
- blow a fuse
- (deyim) Get very angry and fly into a rage
The professor combusted when the student didn't know the answer to a very elementary question.
- blow a gasket
- (deyim) Lose one's temper
- blow job
- slang term for fellatio
- blow off some steam
- (deyim) to do or say something that helps you to get rid of strong feelings or energy: Meetings give people the chance to let off steam if something has been bothering them for a long time. After a long journey, the kids need to run around a bit and let off steam. I've told her she can call me and talk any time she wants to blow off steam
- blow off some steam
- (deyim) Fig. to release one's pent-up emotions, such as anger, usually verbally: I'm sorry I yelled at you. I guess I needed to let off some steam. She's not that mad. She's just letting off steam
- blow off steam
- (deyim) Fig. to release one's pent-up emotions, such as anger, usually verbally: I'm sorry I yelled at you. I guess I needed to let off some steam. She's not that mad. She's just letting off steam
- blow off steam
- (deyim) Fig. to work or play off excess energy: Those boys need to get out and let off some steam. Go out and let off steam!
- blow something off
- (deyim) Ignore or fail to attend something
- blow something out of proportion
- (deyim) Treat something as more serious than it really is
Aren't you getting things rather out of proportion?.
- blow the whistle
- (deyim) Bring (an illicit activity) to an end by informing on the person responsible; call public or official attention to something (as a wrongdoing) kept secret ― usually used with on
- blow this joint
- (deyim) Leave this building, quit this place
I'm sick of playing billiards. Let's blow this joint.
- blow up in someone’s face
- (deyim) If your plans blow up in your face, they do not happen as you expected and cause a lot of problems
- a blow by blow account
- account in great detail
- blow-by-blow
- A blow-by-blow account of an event describes every stage of it in great detail. She wanted a blow-by-blow account of what happened. a blow-by-blow account/description etc an account that includes all the details of an event exactly as they happened
- blow-by-blow
- providing great detail; "a blow-by-blow account of the movie
- blow-by-blow
- providing great detail; "a blow-by-blow account of the movie"
- blow-by-blow
- {s} in great detail