- Being moved or acted upon by moving air or vapour
"blown clouds of dust choked the riders"; "blown soil mounded on the window sill"
- Breathing laboriously or convulsively
"After running up the stairs, he was completely blown";
- pursy [archaic], short-winded, winded
- (of electrical components like fuses or bulbs) having failed due to excess current or burnout
"The blown fuse left the house in darkness", "He replaced the blown light bulb"
- (of glass or metal) shaped by blowing or inflation
"The blown glass vase was delicately crafted"
- Cause to move by means of an air current
"The wind blew the leaves around in the yard"
- Exhale air forcefully through pursed lips, making a blast of moving air
"blow on the soup to cool it down"
- Be blowing or storming
"The wind blew from the West"
- Cause air to go in, on, or through
"Blow my hair dry"
- Free of obstruction by blowing air through
"blow one's nose"
- Be in motion due to some air or water current
"The leaves were blowing in the wind";
- float, drift, be adrift
- Make a sound as if blown
"The whistle blew"
- Sound by having air expelled through a tube
"The trumpets blew"
- Play or sound a wind instrument
"She blew the horn"
- Shape by blowing
"Blow a glass vase"
- [informal] Badly mishandle or ruin something
"I blew the dinner and we had to eat out";
- botch, bodge [Brit, informal], bumble, fumble, botch up [informal], muff [informal], flub [N. Amer, informal], screw up [informal], spoil, muck up [informal], bungle, fluff [informal], bobble [N. Amer], mishandle, louse up [informal], foul up [informal], mess up, butcher, balls up [informal], cock up [Brit, informal], goof up [informal], make a hash of [informal]
- [informal] Spend thoughtlessly; throw away
"He blew his inheritance on his insincere friends";
- waste, squander
- [informal] Spend lavishly or wastefully on
"He blew a lot of money on his new home theatre"
- [N. Amer, informal] Leave somewhere, esp. suddenly or in a hurry
"He blew town before the police arrived"; "Let's blow this party"
- [informal] Be inadequate or objectionable
"this blows!";
- suck [informal], stink [informal]
- Spout moist air from the blowhole
"The whales blew"
- Deposit eggs (of insects)
"certain insects are said to blow"
- Cause to be revealed and jeopardized
"The story blew their cover"
- [informal] Show off, esp. with exaggeration
"He was always blowing about his athletic achievements";
- boast, swash [archaic], shoot a line [informal], brag, gas [informal], bluster, vaunt, gasconade [archaic], skite [Austral, NZ, informal]
- Allow to regain its breath
"blow a horse"
- Melt, break, or become otherwise unusable
"The lightbulbs blew out"; "The fuse blew";
- blow out, burn out
- Burst suddenly
"The tire blew"; "We blew a tire"
- [vulgar] Provide sexual gratification through oral stimulation
- fellate
See also: breathless, dyspneal [N. Amer], dyspneic, dyspnoeal [Brit, Cdn], dyspnoeic, moving
Type of: act, amplify, be, break, break down, break open, breathe out, bring out, burst, conk out [informal], consume, depart, deplete, die, direct, discharge, disclose, discover, displace, divulge, drop, eat, eat up, eject, exaggerate, excite, exhale, exhaust, exist, expel, expend, expire, expose, fail, form, give away, give out, give up the ghost [informal], give way, go, go away, go bad, go wrong, gush, hyperbolise [Brit], hyperbolize, lay, lay bare, let on, let out, locomote, magnify, miscarry, move, overdraw, overstate, pack up [Brit, informal], put down, release, repose, rest, reveal, run through, send, shape, sound, spend, spirt [archaic], split, spout, spurt, stimulate, stir, travel, uncover, unwrap, use, use up, wipe out
Encyclopedia: Blown
Blow, Thomas