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TOEFL BNC: 1822 COCA: 1414

blow

Word family
blow1 /bləʊ $ bloʊ/ ●●● S2 W3 verb (past tensepst blew /bluː/, past participlepp blown /bləʊn $ bloʊn/)  
1 wind moving 风吹动 [intransitiveI, transitiveT]WIND MOVINGDN if the wind or a current of air blows, it moves 〔风〕吹,刮
 A cold breeze was blowing hard.
寒风劲吹。
 It was blowing from an easterly direction.
这是从东面吹过来的。
 Outside, the weather was blowing a gale.
外面狂风大作。
2 wind moving STH 风吹动某物WIND MOVING something [intransitiveI, transitiveT usually + adverbadv/prepositionprep]DN to move, or to move something, by the force of the wind or a current of air 吹动;刮走
 Her hair was blowing in the breeze.
她的头发在微风中飘扬。
 The wind blew the rain into our faces.
风裹挟着雨点吹打在我们脸上。
 My ticket blew away.
我的票被风刮走了。
blow (something) open/shut
 A sudden draught blew the door shut.
一阵突如其来的穿堂风把门吹上了。
3 air from your mouth 嘴里呼出的气 [intransitiveI, transitiveT always + adverbadv/prepositionprep]AIR to send air out from your mouth 吹(气)
blow (something) into/onto/out etc
 She blew onto her coffee to cool it down.
她吹着咖啡让它凉下来。
 He blew the smoke right in my face.
他直对着我的脸吐烟。
4 make a noise 弄出声响 [intransitiveI, transitiveT]APM to make a sound by passing air through a whistle, horn etc 吹奏;(使)鸣响
 The whistle blew for half time.
哨声响起,上半场结束。
 A truck went by and blew its horn at her.
一辆卡车驶过,对着她鸣喇叭。
5 violence 暴力 [transitiveT always + adverbadv/prepositionprep]DAMAGE to damage or destroy something violently with an explosion or by shooting 炸毁;摧毁
blow something away/out/off something
 Part of his leg had been blown off.
他的一条腿被炸掉一截。
blow somebody/something to pieces/bits/smithereens
 A bomb like that could blow you to bits.
那样一颗炸弹可以把你炸得粉碎。
6 lose an opportunity 失去机会 [transitiveT] informalMISTAKE to lose a good opportunity by making a mistake or by being careless 〔因犯错或不小心〕失掉,断送〔机会〕
 We’ve blown our chances of getting that contract.
我们断送了得到那份合同的机会。
 You’ve got a great future ahead of you. Don’t blow it.
你有很大好的前途,不要毁了它。
7 waste money 浪费钱 [transitiveT] informalSPEND MONEY to spend a lot of money in a careless way, especially on one thing 挥霍〔尤在一件事物上〕
 I blew all the money I won on a trip to Hawaii.
我把赢来的钱全部挥霍在一次夏威夷之旅上了。
see thesaurus at spend
8. blow your nose HBHto clean your nose by forcing air through it into a cloth or a piece of soft paper 擤鼻涕
Examples from the Corpus
9 blow somebody a kiss KISSto kiss your hand and then pretend to blow the kiss towards someone 给某人一个飞吻
 She leant out of the window and blew him a kiss.
她探出窗外,给他送上一个飞吻。
Examples from the Corpus
10 electricity stops 电力中断 [intransitiveI, transitiveT]TEE if an electrical fuse blows, or a piece of electrical equipment blows a fuse, the electricity suddenly stops working because a thin wire has melted (使)〔保险丝〕烧断,熔断
 The floodlights blew a fuse.
泛光灯烧断了一根保险丝。
11. tyre 轮胎 [intransitiveI, transitiveT]TTC if a tyre blows, or if a car blows a tyre, it bursts (使)爆裂,(使)破裂
12 make a shape 做成某种形状 [transitiveT]CFBREATHE to make or shape something by sending air out from your mouth 吹成形状;吹制
13 surprise/annoyance 惊讶/烦恼blow/blow me/blow it etc SURPRISED British EnglishBrE spoken said to show annoyance or surprise 讨厌,糟糕
14 MAKE A SECRET KNOWNtell a secret 泄露秘密 [transitiveT] to make known something that was meant to be a secret 泄露〔秘密〕
15 blow somebody’s mind spokenSURPRISED to make you feel very surprised and excited by something 令某人兴奋不已
16 blow your top/stack/cool  (also blow a fuse/gasket) informalANGRY to become extremely angry quickly or suddenly 勃然大怒,大发雷霆
Examples from the Corpus
17 blow the whistle on somebody informalTELL to tell someone in authority about something wrong that someone is doing 打某人的小报告,告发某人
Examples from the Corpus
18. blow something (up) out of (all) proportion EXAGGERATEto make something seem much more serious or important than it is 小题大做;夸大
Examples from the Corpus
19 blow your own trumpet especially British EnglishBrE, blow your own horn American EnglishAmE informalBOAST to talk a lot about your own achievements – used to show disapproval 自吹自擂〔含贬义〕
Examples from the Corpus
20 blow somebody/something out of the water to defeat someone or something that you are competing with, or to achieve much more than they do 把某人/某物打得落花流水;把彻底比下去
Examples from the Corpus
21. blow hot and cold British EnglishBrE informalCHANGE YOUR MIND to keep changing your attitude towards someone or something 反复无常,忽冷忽热,摇摆不定
Examples from the Corpus
22 blow something sky-high British EnglishBrE to destroy an idea, plan etc by showing that it cannot be true or effective 粉碎,使破灭,彻底摧毁
nGrammar
Blow belongs to a group of verbs where the same noun can be the subject of the verb or its object.
You can say:
Someone blew a whistle.
In this sentence, ‘a whistle’ is the object of blow.
You can also say:
A whistle blew.
In this sentence, ‘a whistle’ is the subject of blow.
PHRASAL VERBS
Examples from the Corpus
blow2 ●●○ S3 W3 noun [countableC]  
1 BAD EFFECT 不好的效果 an action or event that causes difficulty or sadness for someone 打击
2 hard hit 重击HIT a hard hit with someone’s hand, a tool, or a weapon 重击,击打
3 blowingBREATHE an action of blowing
4 come to blows (with somebody) FIGHTif two people come to blows, they start arguing or hitting each other because they disagree about something (和某人)争吵起来;(和某人)打起来
Examples from the Corpus
5 soften/cushion the blow ACCEPTto make something unpleasant easier for someone to accept 缓和打击
Examples from the Corpus
6. low blow American EnglishAmE informal something unkind you say to deliberately embarrass or upset someone 故意让人难堪的话,刻薄话
Examples from the Corpus
strike a blow for somebody/something at strike1(17)
nCOLLOCATIONS
ADJECTIVES/NOUN + blow
a big/major/serious/heavy blow
The earthquake was a serious blow to the area’s tourism industry.
a severe/terrible/awful blow
The news was a terrible blow for his family.
a bitter blow (=extremely disappointing)
Their defeat was a bitter blow.
a cruel/devastating/crushing blow (=extremely hard to bear)
Her loss came as a devastating blow to her father.
a body blow (=a very serious difficulty which could cause something to fail completely)
A tax on books would be a body blow for education.
a mortal/fatal/death blow (=causing something to end)
When he quit it dealt a mortal blow to the show.
verbs
be a blow
I can’t deny his leaving was a blow.
deal a blow to somebody/something
The 1982 drought dealt a devastating blow to the country.
come as a blow to somebody
His sudden death came as a huge blow to us all.
deliver a blow
Opinion polls delivered a nasty blow to the Tory leader.
suffer/receive a blow
Our team suffered a blow when Paul was sent off the field.
soften/cushion the blow (=make it easier to deal with)
There are various ways to soften the blow of redundancy among staff.
phrases
be a bit of a blow British EnglishBrE especially spoken (=be disappointing or cause problems for you)
The result was a bit of a blow for the team.
Examples from the Corpus
From Longman Business Dictionary
blowblow /bləʊbloʊ/ verb (past tensepst blew /bluː/, past participlepp blown /bləʊnbloʊn/) [transitiveT]
1informal if you blow money on something, you spend a lot of money on it, often money that you cannot afford
He blew his wages on a new stereo.
2HUMAN RESOURCES blow the whistle (on somebody/something) to tell the authorities that someone in your organization is doing something illegal, dishonest, or wrong
Workers were too scared of their employers to blow the whistle on illegal working hours.
Origin blow1
Old English blawan
blow2
1. (1400-1500) Origin unknown.
2. (1600-1700) → BLOW1

See also: ldoce4166jpg


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