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单词 blow
释义

blown.1

Brit. /bləʊ/, U.S. /bloʊ/
Forms: Middle English Scottish and northern blaw, 1500s bloe, 1500s–1600s blowe, 1500s– blow.
Etymology: First found in 15th cent., the earliest instances being Scots and northern English with form blaw. Origin doubtful. The etymology of blow has been naturally sought in the stem of the Old Germanic verb *bleuwan , Gothic bliggwan to beat (which is not related to Latin fligĕre ), in Old High German bliuwan , Middle High German bliuwen , modern German bläuen ‘to beetle, batter, beat, drub’ (whence bläuel a beetle), Middle Dutch and modern Dutch blouwen ‘to beat, thrash, drub’, now especially ‘to brake or swingle flax or hemp’ (whence blouwel a brake for flax). The Old English cognate would have been *bléowan , but of this no trace is found, and it is not easy on any theory to understand its giving rise to a substantive in the 15th cent. without ever appearing itself. It is still less likely that an English substantive could be formed from the Dutch blouwen or its German equivalent, when there is no such substantive in these languages. (‘Dutch blowe ’ in Johnson is a figment. Another suggestion which suits the form and accounts also for the early Scots and northern English variant blaw , is that this is the same word as blow n.2, or at least, like it, derived < blow v.1 The difficulty is, that, as to the sense, early uses of the word do not indicate any such origin, while historically, blow n.2 (in its own undoubted senses) is of later appearance. The analogy of French soufflet , also, in which a word for ‘a blow with the flat of the hand’ arises out of the verb souffler ‘to blow wind’, though striking at first sight, proves on examination of the history of soufflet to be merely superficial. This may have some association with blow n.2:a1616 W. Shakespeare Taming of Shrew (1623) i. ii. 207 A womans tongue, That giues not halfe so great a blow to heare, As wil a Chessenut in a Farmers fire.
1.
a. A stroke, esp. a firm stroke; a violent application of the fist or of any instrument to an object.
ΘΠ
the world > movement > impact > striking > [noun] > a stroke or blow
dintc897
swengOE
shutec1000
kill?c1225
swipc1275
stroke1297
dentc1325
touchc1325
knock1377
knalc1380
swapc1384
woundc1384
smitinga1398
lush?a1400
sowa1400
swaipa1400
wapc1400
smita1425
popc1425
rumbelowc1425
hitc1450
clope1481
rimmel1487
blow1488
dinga1500
quartera1500
ruska1500
tucka1500
recounterc1515
palta1522
nolpc1540
swoop1544
push1561
smot1566
veny1578
remnant1580
venue1591
cuff1610
poltc1610
dust1611
tank1686
devel1787
dunching1789
flack1823
swinge1823
looder1825
thrash1840
dolk1861
thresh1863
mace-blow1879
pulsation1891
nosebleeder1921
slosh1936
smackeroo1942
dab-
1488 (c1478) Hary Actis & Deidis Schir William Wallace (Adv.) (1968–9) i. l. 348 He gat a blaw, thocht he war lad or lord, That proferryt hym ony lychtlynes.
a1500 (a1460) Towneley Plays (1994) I. xxi. 259 Bot I gif hym a blaw My hart will brist.
1509 S. Hawes Pastime of Pleasure xxxiii. xviii Upon the side I gave him such a blow That I right nere did him overthrow.
1555 W. Waterman tr. J. Boemus Fardle of Facions ii. xii. 279 The Bishoppe [in confirming]..giueth hym a blowe on the lefte chieke.
1611 Bible (King James) Psalms xxxix. 10 I am consumed by the blowe of thine hand. View more context for this quotation
a1616 W. Shakespeare Comedy of Errors (1623) iii. i. 57 Well strooke, there was blow for blow. View more context for this quotation
1643 J. Burroughes Expos. Hosea (1652) 66 It is not the last blow of the axe that fells the oak.
1753 S. Richardson Hist. Sir Charles Grandison IV. iv. 28 Before hard blows are struck, that will leave marks.
1860 J. Tyndall Glaciers of Alps ii. §17. 317 A loud dull sound, like that produced by a heavy blow.
1866 C. Kingsley Hereward the Wake I. xiii. 262 With a blow..he felled Dirk Hammerhand.
b. figurative. Cf. ‘stroke’.
ΘΠ
the mind > goodness and badness > harmfulness > harm or injury > [noun] > damaging
shake1565
blow1608
the world > action or operation > adversity > calamity or misfortune > [noun] > misfortune or ill-luck > instance of misfortune or ill-luck > severe or sudden > a stroke (of misfortune, etc.)
clapc1330
buffetc1400
flaw1513
wipe?1545
bolt1577
blow1608
attaint1655
bludgeoning1888
1608 W. Shakespeare King Lear xx. 213 A most poore man made lame by Fortunes blowes . View more context for this quotation
1609 Euerie Woman in her Humor sig. D1 Y'are a wag Flauia, but talk and you, must needes haue a parting blowe.
1791 J. Boswell Life Johnson anno 1763 I. 213 The hard blows which the great man had given me.
1883 J. A. Froude Short Stud. IV. i. ix. 100 A direct blow at the authority of the young king.
c. A stroke of the shears in shearing sheep. Australian and New Zealand.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > sheep-farming > sheep-shearing > [noun] > stroke of shears
second cut1846
blow1878
long blow1904
1878 ‘Ironbark’ Southerly Busters 180 If coves would let me ‘open out’, And take a bigger ‘blow’.
1890 Argus (Melbourne) 20 Sept. 13/7 The shearers must make their clip clean and thorough. If..a ‘second blow’ is needed, the fleece is hacked.
1956 G. Bowen Wool Away! (ed. 2) iii. 23 The first blow starts at the top of the brisket.
1959 H. P. Tritton Time means Tucker 26/i Bill would shear to the whipping side, then pass the sheep to me, and..seven or eight blows would complete the job.
d. An outcrop of mineral. Australian and New Zealand.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > structure of the earth > structural features > sedimentary formation > [noun] > stratum > position or direction of strata > outcrop
cropping1686
outburst1698
outbreak1714
crop-side1715
crop1719
outcrop1805
rock-head1835
nugget1844
blow1879
1879 W. J. Barry Up & Down xxii. 224 I then came to the conclusion that the lode was not a permanent one, but only what is called a ‘blow’ of quartz.
1922 Chambers's Jrnl. Nov. 704/1 Silver-lead (galena) outcrops standing out in great ‘blows’.
1934 Geogr. Jrnl. 84 504 Quartz blows and ironstone reefs were noted.
1965 G. J. Williams Econ. Geol. N.Z. iii. 29/2 A large blow of quartz was found on the surface of the Rainy Creek property in 1872.
2. figurative. A severe disaster, a sudden and painful calamity; especially as sustained or felt by the sufferer, a sudden and severe shock.
ΘΠ
the world > action or operation > adversity > calamity or misfortune > [noun] > misfortune or ill-luck > instance of misfortune or ill-luck > severe or sudden
shake1565
cut1568
dash1580
knock1649
shock1654
blow1678
stroke1686
black eye1712
1678 N. Wanley Wonders Little World v. i. §94. 467/2 The Hungarians..received from the Turks that terrible blow.
1841 T. B. Macaulay in G. O. Trevelyan Life & Lett. Macaulay (1876) II. ix. 130 His death will be a terrible blow.
1847 L. Hunt Jar of Honey (1848) Pref. 10 They have never recovered the blow given them by the invidious heaviness of the Puritans.
3. ‘An act of hostility’ (Johnson). Usually in plural blows = ‘combat, fighting, war’, in the phrases to be at blows, come (or go), fall, get to blows, exchange blows.
ΘΠ
society > society and the community > dissent > fighting > fight [verb (intransitive)]
fightc900
deal993
wraxlec1000
skirm?c1225
makec1275
mellc1300
to fight togethera1400
meddlec1400
match1440
wring1470
cobc1540
toilc1540
strike1579
beat1586
scuffle1590
exchange blows1594
to bang it out or aboutc1600
buffeta1616
tussle1638
dimicate1657
to try a friskin1675
to battle it1821
muss1851
scrap1874
to mix it1905
dogfight1929
yike1940
to go upside (someone's) head1970
the world > action or operation > harm or detriment > hostile action or attack > [noun] > attack by some hostile or injurious agency
onfalleOE
oncomea1225
sailing13..
visitinga1382
siegec1385
assault1508
visitation1535
assaulting1548
onset1566
assailment1592
blow1594
insult1603
attempt1662
attack1665
offencea1677
seizure1881
society > society and the community > dissent > fighting > fight [verb (intransitive)] > come to blows
to come to strokes1297
to fall in hand (also hands)1448
to fall to1577
come (or go), fall, get to blows1594
to go or fall to cuffsa1616
to fall, get, go to loggerheads1671
1594 W. Shakespeare Henry VI, Pt. 2 ii. iii. 84 Come leaue your drinking, and fall to blowes.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Antony & Cleopatra (1623) ii. vi. 44 When Caesar and your Brother were at blowes . View more context for this quotation
a1645 W. Browne tr. M. Le Roy Hist. Polexander (1647) iv. iii. 226 Wee..wished for nothing else then to be at blowes with our enemies.
1651 T. Hobbes Leviathan i. v. 19 Their controversie must either come to blowes, or be undecided.
1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. I. 556 There was reason to fear that the two parties would come to blows.
1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. I. 322 Too young to have themselves exchanged blows with the cuirassiers of the Parliament.
1891 Leeds Mercury 27 Apr. 4/4 The hostile parties got to blows and stone-throwing.
4. Phrases.
a. at a blow, or at one blow: by one stroke; figurative by one vigorous act; suddenly; at once.
ΘΠ
the world > time > duration > shortness or brevity in time > shortness in time [phrase] > instantaneously
as thou turnest thine handc1225
at a brusha1400
at one (also a) bruntc1450
with a whisk1487
with a whip Sir John1550
in the turn (also turning) of a hand1564
with or at a wink1585
at a blowa1616
in a wink1693
at a stroke1709
in or wi' a whid1719
in the trip of a minute1728
with a thrash1870
the twinkling of a bedpost1871
in a whisk1900
in jig-time1916
a1616 W. Shakespeare Henry VI, Pt. 3 (1623) v. i. 50 I had rather chop this Hand off at a blow . View more context for this quotation
1697 J. Dryden tr. Virgil Georgics iii, in tr. Virgil Wks. 107 To redeem his Honour at a blow . View more context for this quotation
1836 C. Dickens Pickwick Papers (1837) xi. 102 What it is, at one blow, to be deserted by a lovely and fascinating creature.
1859 Ld. Tennyson Elaine in Idylls of King 149 Each had slain his brother at a blow.
b. figurative. to strike a blow: to make an attack, take vigorous action. So, to strike the first blow. without striking a blow: without a struggle.
ΘΠ
the world > action or operation > manner of action > vigour or energy > act or do vigorously [verb (intransitive)] > take vigorous action
to strike a blow1790
the world > action or operation > undertaking > beginning action or activity > begin action or activity [verb (intransitive)] > make a beginning in some enterprise
beginc1200
to break the ice?1553
to break (the) ground1709
to set (or start) the ball rolling1770
to strike the first blow1849
1790 R. Beatson Naval & Mil. Mem. II. 211 A good blow might be struck here.
1812 Ld. Byron Childe Harold: Cantos I & II ii. lxxv. 102 Who would be free themselves must strike the blow.
1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. I. 542 Deputies, without whose consent no great blow could be struck.
1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. I. 261 But neither side dared to strike the first blow.

Compounds

C1. blow-giver, blow-reach, blow-striking.
ΘΠ
the world > movement > impact > striking > [noun] > person or animal that strikes
smiterc1230
blow-giver1548
strikera1586
pulsator1656
hitter1813
the world > space > distance > [noun] > limit of distance or reach > of a stroke or blow
dent1567
dint1579
striking distance1751
blow-reach1871
1548 N. Udall et al. tr. Erasmus Paraphr. Newe Test. I. John xviii. (R.) Our Lord Jesus might..haue letted this blowgeuer.
1586 T. Bowes tr. P. de la Primaudaye French Acad. I. 57 To submit themselues willingly..without blowestriking.
1871 E. C. G. Murray Member for Paris II. 17 [He] was within blow-reach of them.
C2.
blow-by-blow n. originally U.S. used attributively to designate a detailed account of the sequence of punches given in a boxing match; frequently transferred.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > speech > narration > description or act of describing > [adjective] > detailed
full1529
blow-by-blow1933
1933 Amer. Speech Oct. 34/2 Radio announcers..describe the struggle as they see it, give the blow by blow account of its progress.
1939 Time 23 Jan. 30/3 Joe Louis v. John Henry Lewis... Blow-by-blow report by Clem McCarthy and Edwin C. Hill.
1948 H. Lawrence Death of Doll ix. 225 Maybe we'd better get together. Blow by blow description.
1962 Times 7 June 17/3 Blow-by-blow descriptions of Jonson-Jones masques.

Draft additions December 2016

to soften (also cushion) the blow: to make it easier for someone to accept, or cope with the effects of, an unwanted or difficult change in circumstances or an upsetting turn of events.
Π
1714 A. Boyer Polit. State Great Brit. July 73 It was said..That to soften the Blow, the Queen..design'd to bestow on him an Annual Pension of 5000 l. for Life.
1814 Juvenile Port-folio 3 Dec. 190/1 Though..necessity urged him to the banishment of Schuvaloff, he resolved to soften the blow, by explaining to him the cause.
1929 Los Angeles Times 7 Apr. (Sunday Mag. section) 13/2 Mrs. S. deeply regretted that she must ask Margaret to leave, but softened the blow by paying her a month's salary.
1960 Economist 8 Oct. 126/1 The ten year phase-out period for fishing in the outer six miles will do something to cushion the blow to Hull and Grimsby.
1996 A. Templeton Past praying For (1997) i. 30 At the very least he could have warned her about the way things were going and cushioned the blow.
2015 Australian (Nexis) 7 Feb. (Sport section) 43 His four goals from five attempts also went a long way to softening the blow of Cooper's absence.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1887; most recently modified version published online December 2021).

blown.2

Brit. /bləʊ/, U.S. /bloʊ/
Etymology: < blow v.1 Not certainly found before 17th cent., which separates it < blow n.1
1. A blowing; a blast.
a. of the wind. Also, a breath of fresh air; a ‘breather’ (sense 3); to get a blow: to expose oneself to the action of a fresh breeze (colloquial).
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > weather and the atmosphere > weather > wind > [noun] > blast or gust of
ghosteOE
blasta1000
blas?c1225
ragec1405
blorec1440
flaw1513
thud1513
flaga1522
fuddera1522
flake1555
flan1572
whid?1590
flirta1592
gust1594
berry1598
wind-catch1610
snuff1613
stress1625
flash1653
blow1655
fresh1662
scud1694
flurry1698
gush1704
flam1711
waff1727
flawer1737
Roger's Blasta1825
flaff1827
slat1840
scart1861
rodges-blast1879
huffle1889
slap1890
slammer1891
Sir Roger1893
the world > physical sensation > sleeping and waking > refreshment or invigoration > [noun] > that which or one who refreshes or invigorates
spice?c1225
comfort1377
refresherc1450
refreshment1532
reviver1542
sauce1561
salt1579
refocillation1608
whettera1625
fillip1699
stimulant1728
stimulation1733
yeast1769
stimulus1791
inspiriter1821
stimulatory1821
refreshener1824
boost1825
bracer1826
young blood1830
freshener1838
invigoratorc1842
blow1849
tonic1849
elevation1850
stimulator1851
breather1876
pick-me-up1876
a shot in the arm1922
the world > matter > gas > air > fresh air > [noun] > exposure to fresh air > (an outing for) a breath of fresh air
airing1607
blow1849
pipe-opener1859
1655 T. Stanley Hist. Philos. I. i. 15 The Etesian (yearly) winds,..beginning to blow from the North.
1777 W. Dalrymple Trav. Spain & Portugal xliv Rain or blow.
1840 R. H. Dana Two Years before Mast iv. 8 The first blow that I had seen which could really be called a gale.
1849 Theatrical Programme 9 July 48/2 A ‘blow’ upon the river.
1856 C. Dickens in Househ. Words 28 June 554/1 I really ought to go out and take a walk in the wind... I was under a moral obligation to have a blow.
1857 R. Tomes Americans in Japan i. 31 The ‘Mississippi’, in doubling the Cape of Good Hope..escaped any very heavy blow, altho' hardly a week passes without a gale from some quarter.
a1887 Mod. colloq. Went down to Gravesend by the steamer to get a blow.
1888 C. M. Yonge Beechcroft at Rockstone II. xv. 40 ‘You must be tired out!’..‘Oh no, Aunt Ada! Quite freshened by that blow on the common.’
1936 R. Lehmann Weather in Streets iv. i. 386 Been for a blow?.. It freshens you up.
b. of whales.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > mammals > order Cetacea (whales) > [noun] > large member of (whale) > spouting whale > spout of water
spout1823
blowa1851
a1851 F. Cooper in C. Gibbon Casquet of Lit. (1877) V. 211/1 There is the blow of a whale.
1853 E. K. Kane U.S. Grinnell Exped. xxxix. 359 It had, moreover, more of voice mingled with its sibilant ‘blow’ than I had ever heard.
c. of a wind-instrument or other musical instrument; a musical session. Also, of the nose. Cf. blow v.1 14e.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > performing music > playing instruments > playing wind instrument > [noun]
blowingc1000
blastc1275
blow1723
too-tooing1843
blasting1862
windjamming1886
toot-tootling1904
the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > cleaning > cleaning or cleanliness of the person > [noun] > cleaning the nose
snitingc1000
emunction1615
blow1834
society > leisure > the arts > music > performing music > a performance > [noun] > musical session
session1927
jam1929
jam session1929
clambake1937
skiffle1946
bash1949
blow1962
open mike1978
1723 R. Steele Conscious Lovers (1735) i. i. 16 You went to dinner..when the great Blow was given in the Hall at the Pantry-door.
1834 F. Marryat Jacob Faithful I. iii. 47 The astonishing effects of a blow from Domine Dobiensis' sonorous and peace-restoring nose.
1849 C. Dickens David Copperfield (1850) v. 55 ‘Have a blow at it [a flute]’, said the old woman coaxingly.
1962 Sunday Times 10 June (Suppl.) 3 He is now rarely heard having a relaxed blow in the clubs.
1965 G. Melly Owning-up vii. 75 We played three one-hour sessions and relied on musicians who wanted a blow to fill in the gaps.
1966 Crescendo Oct. 31/3 Ernie Garside scoured the city for a set of vibes, but he was unlucky! So Gary didn't get to have a ‘blow’.
1968 Crescendo May 31/1 He told me that he was drastically curtailing the activities of his big band. The musicians might come together now and again for a blow, but to all intents and purposes it's finished as a regular aggregation.
d. of gunpowder, or other explosive. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > sudden or violent sound > explosive sound > [noun]
clapc1440
back-blast1577
bouncea1616
blast1635
fulminating1651
fulmination1651
detonation1677
blow1694
explosion1736
bursting1771
blowing up1772
blowing1799
blow-up1807
pong1823
chunk-chunk1898
chunking1902
1694 London Gaz. No. 2994/3 Hearing some guns go off first, and presently after several Blows.
1720 J. Strype Stow's Surv. of London (rev. ed.) I. ii. iii. 33/1 This Church was..ruined by a lamentable Blow of 27 Barrels of Gunpowder.
2. figurative.
a. A boast; vaunting, boastfulness.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > pride > boasting or boastfulness > [noun]
yelpc888
yelpinga1050
roosingc1175
boastc1300
avauntment1303
avauntry1330
vauntingc1340
bragc1360
avauntingc1380
boastingc1380
avauntance1393
angarda1400
bragging1399
vaunta1400
crackingc1440
crackc1450
crowing1484
jactancea1492
vaunterya1492
bragancea1500
gloriation?1504
blasta1513
vousting1535
braggery?1571
jactation1576
self-boasting1577
thrasonism1596
braggartry1598
braggartism1601
jactancy1623
braggadocianism1624
blazing1628
jactitation1632
word-braving1642
rodomontadea1648
fanfaronade1652
superbiloquence1656
vapouring1656
rodomontading1661
blow1684
goster1703
gasconade1709
gasconading1709
vauntingness1727
braggadocioa1734
Gasconism1744
Gascoigny1754
braggade1763
gostering1763
penny trumpet1783
cockalorum?a1792
boastfulness1810
vauntage1818
bull-flesh1820
blowing1840
vauntiness1851
kompology1854
loud-mouthing1858
skite1860
gabbing1869
mouth1891
buck1895
skiting1916
boosterism1926
the mind > emotion > pride > boasting or boastfulness > [noun] > a boast
roosec1175
avauntc1380
advancement?a1400
vauntise1477
vousta1500
puff1567
rodomontade1591
flourish1592
rodomontado1598
vauntc1600
vauntery1603
vapour1631
fanfaronade1652
gasconado1658
blow1684
gab1737
vaunting1793
windy1933
line-shoot1941
1684 in Roxburghe Ballads (1885) V. 464 They followed their blows, In Musick and Gaming, and acting of Shows.
1883 19th Cent. Nov. 848 Colonial blow, bounce, and impudence.
b. A boaster, a blow-hard. U.S. dialect.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > pride > boasting or boastfulness > [noun] > boaster
yelper1340
avaunterc1374
braggerc1390
fare-makerc1440
seggerc1440
shakerc1440
vaunter1484
roosera1500
praterc1500
cracker1509
vouster?a1513
boaster1574
Thrasoa1576
braggarta1577
braver1589
glorioser1589
bragout1592
rodomont1592
braggadocio1594
gloriosoc1599
puckfist1600
burgullian1601
puff1601
forthputtera1610
rodomontado1609
ostentator1611
fanfaron1622
potgun1623
thrasonist1626
cracka1640
vapourer1653
braggadocian1654
rodomontadist1655
charlatan1670
brag1671
rodomontade1683
gasconader1709
rodomontader1730
Gascon1757
spread eagle1809
bag of wind1816
penny trumpeter1828
spraga1838
gasser1855
blow-hard1857
blower1863
crower1864
gabber1869
flannel-mouth1882
punk-fist1890
skiter1898
Tartarin1903
blow1904
skite1906
poofter1916
trombenik1922
shooter of lines1941
fat-mouth1942
wide-mouth1959
Wheneye1982
trash talker1986
braggarist-
1904 J. C. Lincoln Cap'n Eri xviii. 329 ‘Cap'n Jonadab Wixon used to swear that his grandfather told him 'bout a gale that blew the hair all off a dog, and then the wind changed of a sudden, and blew it all on again.’ Elsie laughed. ‘That must have been a blow,’ she said. ‘Yes. Cap'n Jonadab's something of a blow himself, so he ought to be a good jedge.’
1915 Dial. Notes 4 181 That feller is nothing but a big blow.
1968 E. Kellner Devil & Aunt Serena 105 Willadene, whose father was the biggest Blow in Henry County.
3. The oviposition of flesh-flies or other insects.Cf. fly-blow n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > eggs or young > [noun] > egg(s) > laying eggs
blow?1611
exclusion1646
ovation1656
?1611 G. Chapman tr. Homer Iliads xix. 24 I much fear lest with the blows of flies His brass-inflicted wounds are fil'd.
1875 W. Houghton Sketches Brit. Insects 114 By depositing its eggs (fly-blows).
4. Metallurgy. ‘A single heat or operation of the Bessemer converter’ (Raymond Mining Gloss. 1881); also the quantity of metal dealt with at a single operation.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > working with specific materials > working with metal > [noun] > conversion of metals > of iron into steel > processes involved in
overblow1705
recarburization1868
recarburizing1872
after-blow1879
overblowing1879
blow1881
fluid compression1884
pigging back1900
nodulizing1905
nodulization1915
1881 Trans. Amer. Inst. Mining Engineers 1880–1 9 109 Blow, a single heat or operation of the Bessemer converter.
1883 Daily News 20 Sept. 2/1 Instead of blows of three or four tons, we have now to deal with twelve to fifteen tons.
5. Secret information or warning. slang.
ΚΠ
1928 Sunday Disp. 2 Sept. 3/1 We've had the ‘Blow’ that the ‘Busies’ are coming.

Draft additions June 2013

slang.
a. As a count noun: (a) a smoke, a puff (on a cigarette, pipe, etc.) (now rare); (b) U.S. a dose of opium, heroin, or (now chiefly) cocaine, esp. one smoked or inhaled through the nose.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > tobacco > smoking > [noun] > a smoke or inhalation
whiff1600
quiff1617
draught1621
puffing1675
draw1823
shoch1831
pull1841
blow1855
reek1876
drag1914
inhale1934
1855 C. Raffaello Eureka Stockade xxxii. 42 Meanwhile, fill the pipe, let's have a ‘blow’ together.
1886 Punch 28 Aug. 99/1 Then we went in for akrybat capers, and arter a blow and a wet.
1921 Federal Reporter 273 787 ‘Would you take a blow now, if you got it?’ I said, ‘Doctor, yes, I would.’ He said, ‘You are too willing; I will give you a scrip, but I won't give you a scrip for heroin.’
1936 ‘J. Curtis’ Gilt Kid xxix. 278 Could you spare one [i.e. a cigarette], mate? I ain't had a blow since I was knocked off.
1961 C. Cooper Weed xi. 121 He figured she had just copped a blow somewhere and could not help nodding under the powerful press of heroin.
1971 N.Y. Mag. 30 Aug. 27/1 You got a blow for Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. You got a blow for the weekend for you and your woman. That's a nice amount of coke.
2009 N. George City Kid 134 I had two women in bed with me and some coke.., and decided I'd rather have a blow than get blown.
b. As a mass noun: (a) chiefly U.S. cocaine, esp. in powder form; (b) British marijuana or hashish.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > an intoxicating drug > [noun] > a) narcotic drug(s) > morphine, cocaine, or heroin > cocaine
cocaine1874
coke1908
happy dust1912
candy1925
nose candy1925
gold dust1931
Charley1935
girl1953
blow1971
rock1973
product1983
rock cocaine1984
crack1985
1971 N.Y. Mag. 30 Aug. 24/1 That's a nice amount of coke... That's at least $10 worth of blow, probably more with that quality.
1983 ‘Grandmaster & Melle Mel’ & S. Robinson White Lines (Don't don't do It) (transcribed from song) Hey, man you want to cop some blow? Sure, what you got dust, flakes, or rocks?
1994 I. Welsh Acid House 36 The place was full of..petty criminals and cannabis dealers... They get hassled by the racists [sic] pigs for skag when all they deal in is blow.
1995 B. Obama Dreams from my Father v. 86 I had learned not to care... Pot had helped, and booze; maybe a little blow when you could afford it.
1997 H. Kureishi Love in Blue Time 81 Sweetheart, it's all I've got... You take it. My last lump of blow.
2002 S. Kernick Business of Dying (2005) 57 The unmistakable aroma of freshly exhaled dope... I told him..that we weren't interested if he'd been smoking blow in the privacy of his own home.
2011 S. Tyler & D. Dalton Does Noise in my Head bother You? iv. 121 Not this song again! God! Let's go snort some blow!
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1887; most recently modified version published online December 2021).

blown.3

Brit. /bləʊ/, U.S. /bloʊ/
Etymology: < blow v.2: of recent origin.
1.
a. A state of blossoming; bloom; chiefly in phrases in blow, in full blow, etc.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > part of plant > reproductive part(s) > flower or part containing reproductive organs > flower or flowering plant > [noun] > flowering or blossoming
flourishing1303
blowingc1380
blossomingc1440
blooming1495
flourish1594
blowth1602
efflorescence1626
flowering1629
blow1744
florification1796
inflorescence1801
flowerage1841
florescence1853
floriferousness1882
the world > plants > part of plant > reproductive part(s) > flower or part containing reproductive organs > flower or flowering plant > [adjective] > having flowers or blossom > in bloom
blownc1000
full-blown1576
flowering1592
in beauty1629
flowered1633
in bloom1645
new-blown1656
blooming1664
blowing1667
in flower1697
in (their) flowers1697
abloom1729
blow1744
aflower1869
1744 in Amer. Speech (1940) 15 226/2 The aple trees are full in the blow.
1759 B. Stillingfleet in tr. Misc. Tracts Nat. Hist. App. 226 The wood-anemone was in blow.
1799 J. Robertson Gen. View Agric. Perth 216 When the plants are in full blow, and before their flowers begin to fade.
1822 T. Hood Two Peacocks of Bedfont viii, in London Mag. Oct. 305 I were sorely vext To mar my garden, and cut short the blow Of the last lily I may live to grow.
1866 M. Arnold Thyrsis in Macmillan's Mag. Apr. 450 And stocks in fragrant blow.
1895 G. Meredith Amazing Marriage I. iv. 45 Purple crocuses in bud and blow.
b. figurative.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > beauty > [noun] > stage of greatest beauty
blossoma1250
bloomc1400
flower1609
blow1753
beautyhood1832
1753 S. Richardson Hist. Sir Charles Grandison I. ii. 4 Her beauty hardly yet in its full blow.
1770 J. Langhorne & W. Langhorne tr. Plutarch Lives (1879) II. 1031/1 This amour was in full blow about the time.
1834 M. Edgeworth Helen II. ix. 182 She is not out of blow yet certainly, only too full blown rather for some tastes.
2. A display of blossoms; figurative a display of anything brilliant.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > beauty > splendour > [noun] > fine or gay appearance
gaynessc1443
show1539
fineness1553
bravery1573
brave1596
gaudiness1601
gallantry1613
gaiety1625
blow1710
1710 J. Addison Tatler No. 218. ⁋4 Such a blow of tulips, as was not to be matched.
a1856 H. Miller Testimony of Rocks (1857) i. 49 It exhibits no rich blow of colour.
3. Manner, style, or time of blossoming. Also figurative.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > part of plant > reproductive part(s) > flower or part containing reproductive organs > flower or flowering plant > [noun] > flowering or blossoming > season, period, or manner of
efflorescence1626
blow1748
anthesis1783
florescence1793
1748 S. Richardson Clarissa V. xxi. 193 I have..added to it all the flowers of the same blow.
a1856 H. Miller Testimony of Rocks (1857) xi. 500 Flowers of richer colour and blow.
4. Blossom.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > part of plant > reproductive part(s) > flower or part containing reproductive organs > [noun] > blossom or flower(s)
blossom971
bledec975
blooma1400
flourishinga1400
floweringa1400
flourisha1500
blowing1578
blooming1622
pip1753
floriage1782
florescence1793
blow1797
flowerage1831
bloom-flinder1840
gosling1847–78
snow1859
fleuret1868
bloomagea1876
blossomry1901
1797 J. Downing Treat. Disorders Horned Cattle 31 Take Fox-glove blows.
1866 Morning Star 2 Oct. The blow of the cotton~wood borne by the winds of spring.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1887; most recently modified version published online December 2021).

blowv.1

Brit. /bləʊ/, U.S. /bloʊ/
Forms: Past tense blew. Past participle blown (also in sense 29 blowed). Forms: Old English bláwan, Middle English blawen, (Middle English blauwen), blouwen, Middle English bloawen, Middle English blowen, blowyn, Middle English–1600s blowe, Middle English– blow; (northern) Middle English blau, Middle English–1500s blawe, Middle English– blaw. past tense Old English bleów, bléw, Middle English bleu, Middle English blwe, bleeȝ, bleȝ, Middle English blu, Middle English blue, Middle English–1500s blewe, Middle English– blew. Also Middle English blowide, 1600s blowd, blowede, 1500s– blowed. past participle Old English bláwen, blouen, Middle English–1600s blowen, 1500s–1600s blowne, 1600s– blown; also Middle English y-blowe, blowun, blowe, Middle English–1500s i-blowe, 1600s bloun; northernMiddle English blaun, Middle English blawun, Middle English blawen, 1500s blawne, blawin, blauen, blaw, 1500s– blawn. Also 1500s– blowed.
Etymology: Old English bláwan, past tense bléow, participle bláwen, elsewhere as a strong verb only in Old High German blâ(h)an (past participle blâhan, blân) < Gothic type *blaian, *baiblô, Germanic ? *blæ̂jan, cognate with Latin flāre to blow. (In Old High German this, like other verbs with ai in Gothic, passed into the weak conjugation blâen, blâhen, blâjen, blâwen, blân, Middle High German blæjen, blæwen, blæn, German blähen.) In Old English only in a few senses: see 1, 2, 14; but an immense development of sense and constructions has taken place in middle and modern English, and in later times distinct senses have influenced each other, or run together, in a manner difficult to exhibit in a linear series.
I. To produce a current of air; to set in motion with a current of air.
* intransitively.
1.
a. intransitive. The proper verb naming the motion or action of the wind, or of an aerial current. Sometimes with subject it, as ‘it blows hard’, and often with complement, as ‘it blew a gale, a hurricane’. to blow great guns: to blow a violent gale. to blow up: to rise, increase in force of blowing.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > weather and the atmosphere > weather > wind > blow (of the wind) [verb (intransitive)]
blowc1000
standc1275
waffc1440
respire?a1475
fan1600
suffle1622
the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > breaking or cracking > break [verb (intransitive)] > shatter or break to pieces or burst > blow up or explode
to blow up1697
to blow sky-high1823
poof1915
the world > the earth > weather and the atmosphere > weather > wind > blow (of the wind) [verb (intransitive)] > blow strongly > increase
rise?1520
fresh1599
to come up1647
freshen1669
ascend1715
to get up1834
to blow up1840
stiffen1844
to breeze up1867
to pipe up1901
c1000 West Saxon Gospels: Luke (Corpus Cambr.) xii. 55 Þonne ge geseoð suðan blawan.
c1175 Lamb. Hom. 167 Lutel he hit scaweð..hu biter wind þer blaweð.
?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 101 Ȝef awint blaweð alute towart us.
a1300 Cursor Mundi 532 Wynd þat blaws o loft.
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(1)) (1850) Ecclus. xliii. 22 The cold northerne wind bleeȝ [a1425 L.V. blew].
1530 J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 130 Il uente, it bloweth.
1574 J. Baret Aluearie B 765 I turne saile that waie as the winde bloweth.
1653 I. Walton Compl. Angler 208 Heark how it rains and blows . View more context for this quotation
1697 J. Dryden tr. Virgil Georgics iii, in tr. Virgil Wks. 112 All the West Allies of stormy Boreas blow . View more context for this quotation
1786 R. Burns Poems & Songs (1968) I. 146 November chill blaws loud wi' angry sugh.
1793 J. Smeaton Narr. Edystone Lighthouse (ed. 2) §313 It blowed very hard, especially on the night of lighting.
1802 G. Morris in J. Sparks Life G. Morris (1832) III. 166 Straws and feathers..show which way the wind blows.
1840 F. Marryat Poor Jack x. 60 The gale had blown up again.
1854 H. Miller My Schools & Schoolmasters (1858) 14 It soon began to blow great guns.
b. blow high, blow low: whatever may happen. U.S.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > causation > chance or causelessness > chance [phrase] > come what may
fall what can (also may, will) fallc1225
avalȝe que valȝe1487
fall back, fall edge?1553
blow high, blow low1774
and chance the ducks1874
(come) rain or shine1905
1774 P. V. Fithian Jrnl. & Lett. (1900) 235 Ben is in a wonderful Fluster lest he shall have no company to-morrow at the Dance—But blow high, blow low, he need not be afraid; Virginians..will dance or die!
1776 C. Dibdin Seraglio i. 11 Blow high, blow low, let tempests tear The mainmast by the board.]
a1861 T. Winthrop John Brent (1883) vi. 52 I've booked Brother John fur Paradise; Brother Joseph's got a white robe fur him, blow high, blow low!
1923 R. D. Paine Comrades Rolling Ocean x. 171 There were three musketeers..who were blithely resolved to stand by each other through thick and thin, blow high, blow low.
2.
a. To send from the mouth a current of air (stronger than that produced by ordinary breathing); to produce a current of air in any way, e.g. said of bellows. (Cf. sense 7.)
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > gas > air > moving air > move (of air) [verb (intransitive)] > produce current of air
blowc1000
huff1582
c1000 West Saxon Gospels: John (Corpus Cambr.) xx. 22 Þa bleow he on hi and cwæð to him under-foð haline gast.
1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) Ezek. xxi. 31 In fier of my wodnes Y shal blowe in thee.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 12540 He..hent his hand and bleu þar-in.
1526 W. Bonde Pylgrimage of Perfection iii. sig. YYYvi She waueth with her wynges & so bloweth, that by her mouyng she ingendreth an heate in them.
1572 G. Gascoigne Wks. (1587) 1 My lights and lungs like bellows blow.
a1620 J. Dyke Divers Select Serm. (1640) 63 When the word is preached, then the Bellowes blowes to kindle the fire.
1646 Sir T. Browne Pseudodoxia Epidemica 176 Serrous or jarring motion like that which happeneth while we blow on the teeth of a combe through paper. View more context for this quotation
1715 J. T. Desaguliers tr. N. Gauger Fires Improv'd 42 I blowed upon the Thermometer.
1840 H. W. Longfellow Village Blacksmith in Knickerbocker Nov. 419 You can hear his bellows blow.
b. to blow hot and cold: (figurative) to be or to do one thing at one time, another at another; to be inconsistent or vacillating. (In reference to one of Æsop's Fables.)
ΘΚΠ
the mind > will > decision > irresolution or vacillation > inconstancy > be inconstant [verb (intransitive)]
flitc1386
waivec1425
flitter1543
to play fast and loose1557
range1557
vary1557
halve1566
to blow hot and cold1577
flirt1578
laveer1598
to weathercock it1654
1577 H. I. tr. H. Bullinger 50 Godlie Serm. I. ii. vi. sig. Lviijv/1 One which out of one mouth, doth blowe both hoat and cold.
1638 W. Chillingworth Relig. Protestants i. ii. §113. 95 These men can blow hot and cold out of the same mouth to serve severall purposes.
1690 W. Walker Idiomatologia Anglo-Lat. 61 With the same breath to blow hot and cold.
1694 R. L'Estrange Fables of Aesop (1699) 219 Says the satyr, ‘If you have gotten a trick of blowing hot and cold out of the same mouth, I've e'en done with ye.’]
1855 J. L. Motley Rise Dutch Republic III. v. v. 329 Being constantly ordered ‘to blow hot and cold with the same breath’.
3. To make a blowing sound; to hiss, whistle. spec. of a deer.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > continuous or protracted sound > [verb (intransitive)] > make blowing sound
blow1340
whiff1605
1340 Ayenbite (1866) 32 Þe childe þet ne dar guo his way vor þe guos þet blauþ.
c1475 (?c1425) Avowing of King Arthur (1984) l. 230 All wroth wex þat sqwyne, Blu and brayd vppe his bryne.
1535 Bible (Coverdale) Zech. x. 8 I wil blowe [1611 hisse] for them & gather them together.
1868 Amer. Naturalist 2 467 The hunter says he [sc. the buck deer] ‘blows’; it may be a note of anger or defiance.
4.
a. To breathe hard, pant, puff. to blow out: to be winded. (Cf. sense 8.)
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > sleeping and waking > weariness or exhaustion > become weary or exhausted [verb (intransitive)] > specific
forfare1393
forlie1423
to blow outc1440
flakec1500
to break one's brain, mind, wind1598
stress1756
to hit the wall1974
the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > disorders of internal organs > disordered breathing > have or cause breathing disorder [verb (intransitive)] > become short of breath
shortc1000
to blow outc1440
stuff1488
to break one's brain, mind, wind1598
the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > disorders of internal organs > disordered breathing > have or cause breathing disorder [verb (intransitive)] > become short of breath > pant
fnastc1000
puffc1300
pantc1350
fnesec1386
blowc1440
bluster1530
pech1538
pantlea1626
pank1669
heave1679
fuff1721
pipe1814
huff1881
c1440 Erle Tolous 442 in Ritson Met. Rom. III. 111 The thrydd fledd, and blewe owt faste, The erle ovyrtoke hym at the laste.
a1522 G. Douglas tr. Virgil Æneid (1960) xii. xii. 234 At sic debait that baith thai pant and blaw.
1530 J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 458/2 He bloweth lyke a horse that came newe from galoppyng.
1600 R. Armin Foole vpon Foole sig. C2v They puft and they blow'd, they ranne as swift as a pudding would creepe.
1715 A. Pope tr. Homer Iliad I. ii. 465 Each spent Courser at the Chariot blow.
1847 Ld. Tennyson Princess v. 95 The huge bush-bearded Barons heaved and blew.
b. To breathe; to take breath. dialect. to blow short: (of a horse) to be broken-winded.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > respiratory organs > breathing > breathe [verb (intransitive)]
etheOE
breathea1398
andea1400
respire?a1425
blowc1440
queasea1500
suspire1600
respirate1668
rake1793
the world > health and disease > ill health > animal disease or disorder > disorders of horses > of horse: have disorder [verb (intransitive)] > respiratory disorders
to blow shortc1440
whistle1898
c1440 York Myst. xxxi. 142 Nowe gois a-bakke both, and late þe boy blowe.
?1523 J. Fitzherbert Bk. Husbandry f. xxxiiv Pursy is a dysease in a horse body, and maketh hym to blowe short.
1647 N. Ward Simple Cobler Aggawam 34 They gave him such straynes as made him blow short ever since.
1786 R. Burns Poems & Songs (1968) I. 167 Thou never lap, and sten't, an' breastet, Then stood to blaw.
1860 J. G. Holland Miss Gilbert's Career ii. 29 I'll sit here and blow, till he comes around.
5. Of whales, etc.: To eject water and air from the ‘blow-holes’, before taking in fresh air; to spout.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > mammals > order Cetacea (whales) > [verb (intransitive)] > miscellaneous actions of whale
calvec1000
spout1683
blow1726
peak1839
sound1839
fluke1840
mill1840
breach1843
white-water1856
round1881
1726 P. Dudley in Philos. Trans. 1725 (Royal Soc.) 33 261 Once in a Quarter of an Hour..they are observed to rise and blow, spouting out Water and Wind, and to draw in fresh Air.
1779 T. Forrest Voy. New Guinea 128 Many porpoises blowing near us.
1851 H. Melville Moby-Dick xlvii. 239 The Sperm Whale blows as a clock ticks.
6. To utter loud or noisy breath, to bluster:
Thesaurus »
Categories »
a. To boast, brag (chiefly regional).
b. To fume, storm, speak angrily (chiefly colloquial).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > anger > manifestation of anger > show anger [verb (intransitive)] > speak angrily
spitc1386
ragea1400
blowc1475
blustera1494
storm?1553
pelt1594
tear1602
fare1603
to speak or look daggers1603
to blow hot coalsc1626
rant1647
scream1775
to pop off1914
to carry on1947
c1475 (?c1425) Avowing of King Arthur (1984) l. 354 I, Kay, þat þou knawes, Þat owte of tyme bostus and blawus.
c1475 (?c1400) Apol. Lollard Doctr. (1842) 97 Blouing veynly wiþ fleschli wit.
?1520 J. Rastell Nature .iiii. Element sig. E.i Why man what eylyth ye so to blow?
1790 R. Burns in J. Johnson Scots Musical Museum III. 306 He brags and he blaws o' his siller.
1863 C. C. Clarke Shakespeare-characters x. 270 He has been blowing and storming about this drum.
1873 A. Trollope Austral. & N.Z. xxv In the colonies..when a gentleman sounds his own trumpet he ‘blows.’
1873 M. A. Barker Station Amusem. N.Z. xiv. 237 I..mention this, not out of any desire to ‘blow’ about our sheep.
1878 Cornhill Mag. June 680 ‘My sister ain't the best,’ the child declared, ‘she's always blowing at me.’
1885 R. C. Praed Austral. Life ii. 45 He was famous for ‘blowing’, in Australian parlance,..of his exploits.
1896 H. A. Bryden Tales S. Afr. iii. 68 You know I don't ‘blow’, Jim, or spout tall yarns.
1917 Chrons. N.Z.E.F. 5 Sept. 35/2 I don't care about blowin' about it.
Categories »
c. dialect. To smoke a pipe: see 9b.
** causal uses of the preceding.
7.
a. Beside the expressions to blow with bellows, and the bellows blow (see 2), one is said to blow the bellows, i.e. to work them so as to make them blow.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > working with tools or equipment > work with tools or equipment [verb (intransitive)] > other tools or equipment
filec1230
to blow the bellowsc1440
pump1508
vice1612
plane1678
shovel1685
turn1796
brake1862
pestle1866
chisel1873
roll1881
slice1893
leverage1937
monkeywrench1993
c1440 Leg. Rood (1871) 85 Scho blew þe belise ferly fast.
1509 S. Hawes Pastime of Pleasure xxxvi. xxiii Afrycus Auster made surreccion, Blowyng his bellowes by great occasion.
?1577 J. Northbrooke Spiritus est Vicarius Christi: Treat. Dicing 55 Many which lacke armes may worke with their feete, to blowe Smithes bellowes.
1880 G. Grove Dict. Music II. 577 The four bellows are blown in a manner which we here meet with for the first time.
b. figurative. to blow the bellows: to stir up passion, strife, etc. Obsolete. (Cf. to blow the fire at sense 17b.)
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > dissent > be in dissension or at variance [verb (intransitive)] > cause dissension
to make strife1303
to make the feathers flyc1430
to stir the coals1539
to make mischiefc1572
to blow the bellows1590
to blow the fire1670
to stir the pot1826
to stir (also rouse) the possum1900
to mix it1950
1590 E. Spenser Faerie Queene ii.iii. sig. O8 He cast for to..Blow the bellowes to his swelling vanity.
a1657 J. Balfour Hist. Wks. (1824) II. 263 The bischopes blouing the bellowes, and still craying fyre and suord.
8. (causative of 4.) To cause to pant, to put out of breath: usually of horses.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > sleeping and waking > weariness or exhaustion > weary or exhaust [verb (transitive)] > put out of breath
breathec1425
abreathea1500
overbreathe1586
blow1651
outwind1708
wind1811
pump1858
society > travel > transport > riding on horse (or other animal) > ride (a horse or other animal) [verb (transitive)] > exhaust (a horse) by excessive riding
override1609
jade1615
blow1651
to ride down1682
to sew up1826
to stump up1853
bucket1856
stump1883
the world > health and disease > ill health > animal disease or disorder > disorders of horses > cause injury or disease of horse [verb (transitive)] > respiratory disorders
wind-break1638
blow1651
1651 W. Davenant Gondibert ii. xliii From thence, well blown, he [i.e. Stag] comes to the Relay.
1760 Hist. Europe in Ann. Reg. 24/1 They came up five miles on a full trot without being blown.
1771 P. Parsons Newmarket I. 108 How much water, given to a horse before he starts, will blow him.
1816 W. Scott Old Mortality xii, in Tales of my Landlord 1st Ser. II. 304 Move steadily, and do not blow the horses.
1859 Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. Mar. 306/1 The Russians..were..pretty well blown in the pursuit.
*** transitive (with the air, breath, etc., as object.)
9.
a. transitive. To breathe out, emit, produce (a current of air, breath, etc.) with the mouth; to give forth by breathing; also to force or cause to pass (a current of air) through, into, upon, by other means. Also figurative.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > gas > air > moving air > set (air) in motion [verb (transitive)] > produce (a current of air)
blowc1175
c1175 Lamb. Hom. 75 Þan deþliche atter · þet þe alde deouel blou on adam.
c1175 Lamb. Hom. 99 [Crist ableow þana halȝa gast ofer þa apostlas].
c1375 J. Wyclif Antecrist (Todd) 148 Þei blowen on hem a stynkand breþe.
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(1)) (1850) Wisd. xv. 11 That bleȝ [a1425 L.V. blowide] in to hym a lifli spirit.
1509 S. Hawes Pastime of Pleasure xxxvi. iii A fende..Blowyng out fyre.
1591 E. Spenser Ruines of Rome in Complaints xxvi Where colde Boreas blowes his bitter stormes.
1651 T. Hobbes Leviathan vi. i. ii Good thoughts are blown into a man by God.
1784 J. Adams Diary 10 July (1961) III. 170 If inflammable Air were blown thro the Pipe.
1841 H. W. Longfellow Wreck of Hesperus in Boston Bk. (ed. 3) 74 He blew a whiff from his pipe.
1866 T. H. Huxley Lessons Elem. Physiol. (1869) iv. 96 If a pipe be now fitted into the bronchus, and air blown through it.
b. To smoke (tobacco); also intransitive (dialect) But to blow a cloud is a common figurative expression for to smoke a pipe. See also cloud n. 5b.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > tobacco > smoking > smoke [verb (intransitive)]
whiff1602
smoke1617
to blow (raise obs.) a cloud1699
drawa1774
smook1805
blow1808
to have (or take) a smoke1835
tobacconize1876
shoch1898
inhale1933
fag1940
to have a burn1941
the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > tobacco > smoking > use as material for smoking [verb (transitive)] > use in the act of smoking
drone1600
to take the whiff1600
whiffc1616
puff1664
smoke1707
fuff1786
blow1808
burn1929
chuff1940
1808 J. Jamieson Etymol. Dict. Sc. Lang. (at cited word) To blaw Tobacco; to blaw.
1848 Sessions Mar. 847 I could sit down and blow my 'bacco.
c1855 N. Hawthorne Mother Rigby's Pipe i Smoke, puff, blow thy cloud.
1856 H. Mayhew Great World London 5 Smoke a pipe of baccer..blow your yard of tripe of nosey-me-knacker.
c. To lay out or get through (money) in a lavish manner; to squander; = blue v.2 1 slang. Also reflexive. (U.S. dialect): see quot. 1896.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > management of money > expenditure > spend [verb (reflexive)] > spend freely
blow1874
society > trade and finance > management of money > expenditure > waste of money or extravagance > spend extravagantly [verb (transitive)]
to piss (money, an opportunity, etc.) against the wall1540
lavish1542
melt1607
to piss away1628
unbowel1647
tap1712
sport1785
waster1821
blue1846
spree1859
to frivol away1866
blow1874
bust1878
skittle1883
to blow in1886
burst1892
bang1897
1874 Hotten's Slang Dict. (rev. ed.) 86 Blew, or blow,..to lose or spend money.
1892 Daily News 5 Sept. 6/3 Sometimes you'll blow a little money..but another week you may make a lot.
1896 Dial. Notes 1 412 ‘To blow oneself’, to spend money freely.
1902 S. E. White Blazed Trail xxviii. 193 ‘Well, bub,’ finally drawled a voice from the corner, ‘blowed that stake you made out of Radway, yet?’
1904 W. H. Smith Promoters v. 100 The Church people in England were the folks that had the money to blow.
1921 R. D. Paine Comrades Rolling Ocean iv. 57 When I pick up easy money, I just naturally have to blow it.
1932 H. Simpson Boomerang x. 244 A thousand pounds, which she proposed..to blow in a couple of months' high living.
1957 Economist 21 Dec. 1030/1 He will probably feel able to blow with a clear conscience the £2,000.
d. to blow in: to spend, squander. Also absol. slang (chiefly U.S.).
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > management of money > expenditure > waste of money or extravagance > spend extravagantly [verb (transitive)]
to piss (money, an opportunity, etc.) against the wall1540
lavish1542
melt1607
to piss away1628
unbowel1647
tap1712
sport1785
waster1821
blue1846
spree1859
to frivol away1866
blow1874
bust1878
skittle1883
to blow in1886
burst1892
bang1897
1886 in Amer. Speech (1950) 25 30/2 When Davis has a dollar he's dead bent on blowing it all in.
1887 F. Francis Saddle & Mocassin 144 ‘Sam went off on a bend.’ ‘To blow in?’ Jake laughed assent.
1894 Amer. Newspaper The third ‘blows in’ his money in a glorious drunk at the saloon.
1903 Outlook 7 Nov. 586 He had blown in all his earnings in a grand frolic.
1934 J. T. Farrell Young Manhood (1936) i. 163 Last winter I got sixty bucks from him for tuition and books and blew it in.
1938 R. Finlayson Brown Man's Burden 24 After breakfast I'll borrow Henare's car and we'll blow in the cash.
1946 F. Sargeson That Summer 35 Then he'd go to town and blow his money in, usually at the races.
e. To lose or bungle (an opportunity, etc.); to mishandle (a situation); to ruin, spoil. Frequently with it. slang (originally U.S.).
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > damage > damage or injure [verb (transitive)]
mareOE
shendOE
hinderc1000
amarOE
awemc1275
noyc1300
touchc1300
bleche1340
blemisha1375
spill1377
misdoa1387
grieve1390
damagea1400
despoil?a1400
matea1400
snapea1400
mankc1400
overthrowa1425
tamec1430
undermine1430
blunder1440
depaira1460
adommage?1473
endamage1477
prejudicec1487
fulyie1488
martyra1500
dyscrase?1504
corrupt1526
mangle1534
danger1538
destroy1542
spoil1563
ruinate1564
ruin1567
wrake1570
injury1579
bane1587
massacre1589
ravish1594
wrong1595
rifle1604
tainta1616
mutilea1618
to do violence toa1625
flaw1665
stun1676
quail1682
maul1694
moil1698
damnify1712
margullie1721
maul1782
buga1790
mux1806
queer1818
batter1840
puckeroo1840
rim-rack1841
pretty1868
garbage1899
savage1899
to do in1905
strafe1915
mash1924
blow1943
nuke1967
mung1969
the world > action or operation > ability > inability > unskilfulness > do something unskilfully [verb (intransitive)] > bungle
bungle1549
to put the wrong foot before1590
bebotch1609
to put one's foot in (also into) it1796
mess1823
boggle1853
to make a muff of oneself1884
duff1890
bobble1908
miscue1941
blow1943
to make a porridge (of)1969
sheg1981
the world > action or operation > ability > inability > unskilfulness > be unskilled in [verb (transitive)] > bungle
botch1530
bungle1530
mumble1588
muddle1605
mash1642
bumble?1719
to fall through ——1726
fuck1776
blunder1805
to make a mull of1821
bitch1823
mess1823
to make a mess of1834
smudge1864
to muck up1875
boss1887
to make balls of1889
duff1890
foozle1892
bollocks1901
fluff1902
to make a muck of1903
bobble1908
to ball up1911
jazz1914
boob1915
to make a hash of1920
muff1922
flub1924
to make a hat of1925
to ass up1932
louse1934
screw1938
blow1943
to foul up1943
eff1945
balls1947
to make a hames of1947
to arse up1951
to fuck up1967
dork1969
sheg1981
bodge1984
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > disregard for truth, falsehood > lack of truth, falsity > mistake [phrase]
to miss the cushiona1529
to get, have, or take the (or a) wrong (or right) sow by the ear1546
to pray without one's beads1641
to have the wrong end of the stick?1793
to bark up the wrong tree1832
the boot (is) on the wrong leg or foot1834
to have another think coming1896
you have another guess coming1935
to be off the beam1941
blow1943
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > disregard for truth, falsehood > lack of truth, falsity > an error, mistake > make a mess of [verb (transitive)]
blow1943
to make a hames of1947
to cock up1948
goof1960
to fuck up1967
1943 W. R. Burnett Nobody lives Forever i. x. 60 He'll probably blow it. He's beginning to look old.
1950 H. E. Goldin Dict. Amer. Underworld Lingo 30/1 Blow, v... 3. To lose; to bungle. ‘Don't blow that piece (revolver); it cost me a double sawbuck (twenty dollars).’
1967 Boston Herald 1 Apr. 16/4 There wasn't anyone in the Boston contingent who could recall him ever blowing three layups in a game before.
1971 It 9 Sept. 19/1 This could have been a wonderful record but they blew it.
1977 Tennis World Sept. 17/1 If a player is nervous he ‘muffs’, ‘flubs’ or ‘blows’ his shots.
1983 Times 22 Jan. 1/2 Let's go in June, and win, rather than blow it in March, 1984.
10. to blow off: (transitive) to allow (steam or the like) to escape forcibly with a blowing noise; also figurative to get rid of (superfluous energy, emotion, etc.) in a noisy way; intransitive (for reflexive) of steam, gas, etc.: to escape forcibly.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > aspects of emotion > manifestation of emotion > manifest or exhibit (emotions) [verb (transitive)] > expel emotion in noisy or vigorous manner
exhale1745
to blow off1836
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > going or coming out > go or come out [verb (intransitive)] > of something confined > forcibly (of steam or gas)
to blow off1836
the world > food and drink > drink > providing or serving drink > [verb (transitive)] > treat to drinks
to blow off1884
1836 F. Marryat Snarleyyow xi, in Metropolitan May 10 The widow..sat..fuming and blowing off her steam.
1865 W. S. Jevons Coal Quest. (ed. 2) 65 Carburetted gas..is liable to blow off and endanger the lives of hundreds of persons.
1884 Christian Commonw. 24 Jan. 348/1 Blowing off their superfluous energy in singing and shouting.
11. To utter: also with out. Most frequently in a bad sense: To utter boastfully, angrily, etc. to blow into one's ear: to whisper privily. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > pride > boasting or boastfulness > utter boastfully [verb (transitive)]
avauntc1374
blowc1380
brag1627
vaunt1633
vapour1658
to blow one's own trumpet1854
woof1934
society > communication > information > action of informing > information [phrase] > whisper (something) privily
to blow into one's ear1652
c1380 J. Wyclif Three Treat. i. 69 Censuris þat þe fend bloweþ (as ben suspendis and interdicyngis).
c1380 Sir Ferumbras (1879) l. 5421 Þan wax þe Amyral glad..& gan to blowe bost.
c1440 W. Hylton Scala Perfeccionis (1494) ii. xlii Blowynge psalmes & louynges to Jhesu.
1487 (a1380) J. Barbour Bruce (St. John's Cambr.) iv. 122 The gret bost that it [sc. pryde] blawis.
c1550 Complaynt Scotl. (1979) vi. 30 That samyn sound as thay beystis hed blauen.
1564 T. Becon New Catech. in Catech. & Other Pieces (1844) 344 He blowed out many furious and unseemly words.
1642 T. Taylor God's Judgem. i. i. xii. 35 Threats were blowne out on every side against the Faithful.
1652 C. Cotterell tr. G. de Costes de La Calprenède Cassandra (1676) iv. 61 These things which malitious Roxana blew into Statira's ears.
**** transitive To drive or transport by blowing.
12.
a. transitive. To drive or carry (things) by means of a current of air; also figurative. Const. simply, or with prepositions or adverbs of direction, as away, down, from, off, to, etc.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > impelling or driving > impel or drive [verb (transitive)] > by blowing or puffing
puff?c1225
blowa1300
whiffle1641
whuffle1906
a1300 Cursor Mundi 22922 Þof his bodi al war brint, And blaun ouer al þe puder tint.
c1300 K. Alis. 5630 The wynde you may theder blawen, In lesse than in twenty dawen.
1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) Mal. i. 13 Ȝe han blowe it awey.
c1540 (?a1400) Destr. Troy 1982 [Þai] were blouen to þe brode se in a bir swithe.
1577 M. Hanmer tr. Bp. Eusebius in Aunc. Eccl. Hist. ix. iv. 175 Ye heate of persecution was blowen against vs.
1600 W. Shakespeare Henry IV, Pt. 2 v. iii. 87 Falst. What wind blew you hither Pistol? Pistol Not the ill winde which blowes no man to good. View more context for this quotation
a1616 W. Shakespeare Henry VI, Pt. 3 (1623) iii. i. 83 Looke, as I blow this Feather from my Face, And as the Ayre blowes it to me againe. View more context for this quotation
1697 J. Dryden tr. Virgil Georgics iii, in tr. Virgil Wks. 102 Winnow'd Chaff, by western winds is blown . View more context for this quotation
1712 J. Addison Spectator No. 269. ¶7 The Wind..blew down the end of one of his Barns.
1870 F. R. Wilson Archit. Surv. Churches Lindisfarne 68 The roof was blown off.
b. intransitive (for reflexive). To be driven or carried by the wind; to move before the wind. Same const. Also (U.S. colloquial), to move as if carried or impelled by the wind.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > progressive motion > specific manner of progressive motion > move progressively in specific manner [verb (intransitive)] > as if carried by the wind
blow1842
1842 Ld. Tennyson Goose xiii, in Poems (new ed.) I. 233 Her cap blew off, her gown blew up.
1842 Ld. Tennyson Day-dream in Poems (new ed.) II. 156 The hedge broke in, the banner blew.
1844 Knickerbocker 23 51 I was half awake..when Bob came in, blew about the room for a while, and cried out.
1868 S. Hale Lett. (1919) 42 She is a picturesque looking creature... Why she blows up and down the Nile year in and year out,.. I dunno.
1903 E. C. Waltz Pa Gladden 61 The kitchen door opened and the wind-tossed farmer fairly blew in.
c. to blow over (formerly in perfect to be blown over): (of storms or storm-clouds) to pass over a place without descending upon it; to pass away, come to an end; also figurative of misfortune, danger, etc. Also to blow off in same sense.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > end or extremity > come to an end [verb (intransitive)]
finea1300
cease1382
fall1523
to break up1544
to blow off1633
subside1654
peter1846
1633 J. Fosbroke Englands Warning 26 in Six Serm. When the storm is blown over, they return to their old bias again.
1641 ‘Smectymnuus’ Vindic. Answer Hvmble Remonstr. §13. 131 This cloud will soone blow over.
1692 R. South 12 Serm. I. 636 Do they think that..this dreadfull Sentence [shall] blow off without Execution?
1794 G. Morris in J. Sparks Life G. Morris (1832) II. 399 The affair is blown over.
1849 A. Alison Hist. Europe from French Revol. (new ed.) VIII. liv. 479 The danger had blown over.
d. to blow in: to appear or turn up unexpectedly; to drop in. colloquial (originally U.S.).
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > going or coming in > go or come in [verb (intransitive)] > come in unexpectedly
to drop in1609
to look ina1616
to blow in1895
pop1977
1895 F. Remington Pony Tracks 104 We were all very busy when William ‘blew in’ with a great sputtering.
1904 G. H. Lorimer Old Gorgon Graham 47 Yesterday our old college friend, Clarence, blew in from Monte Carlo.
1910 W. M. Raine Bucky O'Connor 97 Him and York Neil..blew in last night from their mine.
1911 H. Quick Yellowstone Nights ix. 241 A witness..from outside the jurisdiction had blowed in.
1913 R. Brooke Let. 6 Sept. (1968) 505 I ‘blew in’ here yesterday, & found about nine letters from you.
1924 J. Galsworthy White Monkey ii. iii If anything blows in, I'll remember you.
1940 War Illustr. 16 Feb. ii/3 He just blew in out of the black-out and asked if he might use the telephone.
e. To go away, to leave hurriedly. slang (originally U.S.).
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > going away > go away [verb (intransitive)] > go away suddenly or hastily
fleec825
runOE
swervea1225
biwevec1275
skip1338
streekc1380
warpa1400
yerna1400
smoltc1400
stepc1460
to flee (one's) touch?1515
skirr1548
rubc1550
to make awaya1566
lope1575
scuddle1577
scoura1592
to take the start1600
to walk off1604
to break awaya1616
to make off1652
to fly off1667
scuttle1681
whew1684
scamper1687
whistle off1689
brush1699
to buy a brush1699
to take (its, etc.) wing1704
decamp1751
to take (a) French leave1751
morris1765
to rush off1794
to hop the twig1797
to run along1803
scoot1805
to take off1815
speela1818
to cut (also make, take) one's lucky1821
to make (take) tracks (for)1824
absquatulize1829
mosey1829
absquatulate1830
put1834
streak1834
vamoose1834
to put out1835
cut1836
stump it1841
scratch1843
scarper1846
to vamoose the ranch1847
hook1851
shoo1851
slide1859
to cut and run1861
get1861
skedaddle1862
bolt1864
cheese it1866
to do a bunkc1870
to wake snakes1872
bunk1877
nit1882
to pull one's freight1884
fooster1892
to get the (also to) hell out (of)1892
smoke1893
mooch1899
to fly the coop1901
skyhoot1901
shemozzle1902
to light a shuck1905
to beat it1906
pooter1907
to take a run-out powder1909
blow1912
to buzz off1914
to hop it1914
skate1915
beetle1919
scram1928
amscray1931
boogie1940
skidoo1949
bug1950
do a flit1952
to do a scarper1958
to hit, split or take the breeze1959
to do a runner1980
to be (also get, go) ghost1986
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > going away > go away from [verb (transitive)] > go away from suddenly or hurriedly
fleeOE
to give the bag to1582
fling1588
vamoose1847
jump1875
skip1884
to leave (a person) flat1902
blow1912
scarper1937
society > travel > aspects of travel > departure, leaving, or going away > depart, leave, or go away [verb (intransitive)] > hastily or suddenly
fleec825
warpa1400
wringc1400
bolt1575
decamp1751
mog1770
to hop the twig1797
to take (its, etc.) wing1806
to make (take) tracks (for)1824
vamoose1834
fade1848
skedaddle1862
to beat it1906
blow1912
to hop it1914
beetle1919
bug1950
jet1951
1902 B. Burgundy's Lett. 50 Then we had another and blew the joint.]
1912 G. Ade Knocking Neighbors 93 She..tied up the Geranium and took the unfinished Tatting and Blew.
1936 ‘J. Curtis’ Gilt Kid 130 Sorry and all that, but I'm afraid I must blow now.
1937 E. Linklater Juan in China xxv. 315 ‘And what's happened to Rocco?’..‘He's blown. He's gone up north.’
1961 J. I. M. Stewart Man who won Pools iii. 38 All I want is that all these people should blow.
f. To depart (esp. suddenly) from; to vacate or quit. U.S. slang.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > aspects of travel > departure, leaving, or going away > depart from or leave [verb (transitive)]
leaveeOE
beleavea1250
devoidc1325
voidc1330
to pass out ofa1398
roomc1400
departa1425
avoid1447
ishc1450
part1496
quita1568
shrink1594
shifta1642
to turn out of ——1656
refraina1723
blow1902
1902 [see sense 12e].
1926 Flynn's 16 Jan. 640/1 Knock-'em Loose, the Bull, was on the razee an' I got trun out, so I blew de joint.
1949 in H. Wentworth & S. B. Flexner Dict. Amer. Slang (1960) 45/2 Alive, you're ready to blow town.
1971 ‘R. Macdonald’ Underground Man iv. 28 I'm blowing this town tonight and taking the money with me.
1984 J. Davis Garfield: Who's Talking? 75 ‘Let's blow this joint, Garfield.’ ‘Hang on!’
13.
a. transitive (figurative) To proclaim, publish, blaze, spread abroad, about, (out obsolete), etc.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > information > publishing or spreading abroad > publish or spread abroad [verb (transitive)]
sowc888
blowc1275
dispeple1297
to do abroadc1300
fame1303
publyc1350
defamea1382
publisha1382
open?1387
proclaima1393
slandera1400
spreada1400
abroachc1400
throwc1400
to give outa1425
promote?a1425
noisec1425
publicc1430
noisec1440
divulgea1464
to put outc1475
skail1487
to come out witha1500
bruit1525
bruita1529
to bear out1530
divulgate1530
promulgate1530
propale?1530
ventilate1530
provulgate1535
sparple1536
sparse1536
promulge1539
disperse1548
publicate1548
forthtell1549
hurly-burly?1550
propagate1554
to set abroada1555
utter1561
to set forth1567
blaze1570
evulgate1570
scatter1576
rear?1577
to carry about1585
pervulgate1586
celebrate?1596
propalate1598
vent1602
evulge1611
to give forth1611
impublic1628
ventilate1637
disseminate1643
expose1644
emit1650
to put about1664
to send abroad1681
to get abroad1688
to take out1697
advertise1710
forward1713
to set abouta1715
circulate1780
broadcast1829
vent1832
vulgate1851
debit1879
float1883
c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1978) l. 13487 Þæ king of Peytouwe har mon iblowen [c1300 Otho iblowe].
c1384 G. Chaucer Hous of Fame 1139 And her fames wide yblowe.
1513 G. Douglas tr. Virgil Æneid (ad fin.) Direction 129 Thy fame is blaw, thy prowes and renoun Dyvulgat ar.
1541 Act 33 Hen. VIII xxi They shal not openly blow it abrode.
1603 R. Knolles Gen. Hist. Turkes 429 These news..being blowne out of the campe into the citie.
1819 W. Scott Ivanhoe III. iv. 99 So soon as Richard's return is blown abroad.
1859 Ld. Tennyson Guinevere in Idylls of King 233 A rumour wildly blown about.
b. To proclaim or praise boastfully.
ΚΠ
1878 J. H. Beadle Western Wilds viii. 126 This [State] the most loudly blowed and persistently advertised of the whole sisterhood, has been knocking for admission into the Union since 1849.
1878 J. H. Beadle Western Wilds xiii. 194 In Kansas or Nebraska we should see..one or two live journals blowing the place as the ‘future metropolis of the boundless West’.
II. To act upon an object, by blowing air into, upon, or at it.
* To blow a musical instrument.
14.
a. transitive. To make (a wind-instrument) sound. (Formerly also with up, out.) to blow one's own trumpet: (figurative) to sound one's own praises, to brag.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > working with specific materials > working with metal > work with metal [verb (transitive)] > found or cast (object)
blowc1000
yetOE
cast1496
found1562
run1690
pour1873
society > leisure > the arts > music > performing music > playing instruments > playing wind instrument > play wind instrument [verb (transitive)]
blowc1000
blazec1384
blast1530
toot1614
breathe1718
tootle1890
c1000 West Saxon Gospells: Matt. (Corpus Cambr.) vi. 2 Ne blawe man byman beforan þe.
c1200 Trin. Coll. Hom. 115 Þe bemene drem þe þe engles blewen.
c1450 (c1380) G. Chaucer House of Fame (Fairf. 16) (1878) l. 775 Whan a pipe is blowen sharpe The aire ys twyst with violence.
c1450 J. Lydgate Merita Missæ 171 Pryd gothe beforen And schame comythe aftyr, and blawythe horne.
1490 W. Caxton tr. Eneydos xlvi. 139 They..blew vp their trompettes for to gyue a sharpe sawte.
1535 Bible (Coverdale) 1 Macc. iii. 54 They blewe out the trompettes.
1611 Bible (King James) Psalms lxxxi. 3 Blow vp the trumpet in the new Moone. View more context for this quotation
1611 Bible (King James) Hosea v. 8 Blow yee the cornet in Gibeah. View more context for this quotation
1832 Ld. Tennyson Palace of Art ix, in Poems (new ed.) 71 The belted hunter blew His wreathèd buglehorn.
b. To sound (a note or blast) on or with an instrument.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > performing music > playing instruments > playing wind instrument > play wind instrument [verb (transitive)] > play (note on)
blowc1400
sound1806
screed1821
c1400 (?c1390) Sir Gawain & Green Knight (1940) l. 1141 Blwe bygly in bugleȝ þre bare moteȝ.
1486 Bk. St. Albans E v b Iij. motis shall ye blaw booth lowde and shill.
c1600 Rob. Hood (Ritson) ii. ix. 60 Let me have my beugle horn, And blow but blasts three.
1793 R. Burns in G. Thomson Sel. Coll. Orig. Sc. Airs I. i. 22 When wild War's deadly blast was blawn.
1843 C. Fox Jrnls. II. 12 Though he has blown so loud a blast.
c. To sound the signal of (an alarm, advance, retreat, etc.) on an instrument.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > indication > signalling > audible signalling > signalling with other sounding instruments > sound signal on instrument [verb (transitive)]
blowc1330
c1330 (?a1300) Sir Tristrem (1886) l. 518 Þe tokening when þai blewe.
c1420 Anturs of Arthure v. 10 The king blue a rechase.
1552 R. Huloet Abcedarium Anglico Latinum Blowe the Retreate in battayle.
1561 J. Daus tr. H. Bullinger Hundred Serm. vpon Apocalips Pref. sig. A.vii The Deuil..bloweth the one.
1621 R. Montagu Diatribæ Hist. Tithes 398 Wee must goe blow the Seeke, and cast about againe.
1634 Malory's Arthur (1816) I. 112 Then king Arthur blew the prize, and dight the hart there.
a1641 R. Montagu Acts & Monuments (1642) 385 He tels they were Grecians born..where, when, upon what termes, you must, if you will, goe blow the seek.
1805 R. Southey Madoc ii. xviii. 362 Ye have blown The fall too soon.
d. Predicated of the instrument.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > musical sound > sound of instruments > sound (notes, etc.) [verb (transitive)] > wind instrument
blowa1616
a1616 W. Shakespeare Henry VI, Pt. 2 (1623) v. iii. 43 Let the generall Trumpet blow his blast. View more context for this quotation
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost i. 540 Sonorous mettal blowing Martial sounds. View more context for this quotation
1758 J. Beattie Ode to Peace ii. iii, in Scots Mag. Sept. 482/2 The fierce alarms Her trump terrific blows.
e. To play jazz on (any instrument). Also intransitive. colloquial (originally U.S.).
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > performing music > perform music [verb (intransitive)] > perform specific type of music
serenade1671
prelude1680
fugue1783
pastoralize1828
preludize1829
symphonize1833
ran-tan1866
counterpoint1875
rag1896
ragtime1908
jazz1916
rock1931
jivec1938
bop1947
blow1949
rock-and-roll1956
skiffle1957
hip-hop1983
society > leisure > the arts > music > performing music > perform (music) [verb (transitive)] > perform specific types of music
jig1598
serenade1672
prelude1795
shivaree1805
dirge1826
ran-tan1866
overture1870
threnody1893
ragtime1908
rag1914
blow1949
1949 L. Feather Inside Be-bop ii. 72 Nobody ever gave Diz or Bird a lesson in the art of blowing a jazz chorus.
1962 John o' London's 3 May 433/1 A blowin' session is a general term used to describe that form of jazz where men get together for the pleasure of making free and spontaneous music.
1962 Radio Times 17 May 43/3 A jazz musician never plays an instrument—he blows it, whether it be drums, piano, bass, or horn. Should he ‘blow’ with feeling, or great excitement (‘like wild’) he is either ‘way out’ or ‘wailing’.
1966 Crescendo Sept. 27/1 The not-so-advanced suffered from insufficient outlet, and opportunity to blow and to improve.
1966 Melody Maker 15 Oct. 6 Dave Gelly is a school librarian who also blows jazz tenor with the New Jazz Orchestra.
1968 Jazz Monthly Apr. 23/2 His style was hard to fit into the standards of hard bop blowing sessions.
15. intransitive.
a. Of a wind-instrument: To give forth a sound by being blown. Also with up (obsolete).
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > musical sound > sound of instruments > sound [verb (intransitive)] > wind instruments
blow?c1225
bray1340
toot1516
blustera1590
?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 157 Þe engles bemen. þe schulen..biforen þe grimfule dom grisliche blawen.
a1340 R. Rolle Pricke of Conscience 4677 Þe beme þat blaw sal on domsday.
a1500 (?c1400) Sir Triamour (Cambr.) (1937) l. 1092 The kyng..herde a bewgull blowe!
1535 W. Stewart tr. H. Boethius Bk. Cron. Scotl. (1858) II. 181 All the trumpettis blawand vp in tune.
1609 W. Shakespeare Troilus & Cressida i. iii. 253 Trumpet blowe alowd, Send thy brasse voyce through all these lazie tents.
1647 R. Fanshawe tr. B. Guarini Pastor Fido (1676) 52 But list a little, doth not a Horn blow?
1875 O. W. Holmes Old Cambr. in Poems (1884) 306 Our trumpets needs must blow.
b. Of the blower: To sound a blast. to blow up: to sound a whistle (as a signal).
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > performing music > playing instruments > playing wind instrument > play wind instrument [verb (intransitive)]
blowc1275
blast1384
toot1549
wind1600
tootle1842
tootle-too1857
society > communication > indication > signalling > audible signalling > signalling with other sounding instruments > sound signal on instrument [verb (intransitive)] > sound whistle as signal
whistlec1000
pipe1707
to blow up1889
c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1963) l. 4016 Þe king lette blawen [c1300 Otho blowen] & bonnien his ferden.
1489 (a1380) J. Barbour Bruce (Adv.) iii. 484 Quhen he hard sa blaw & cry.
1523 Ld. Berners tr. J. Froissart Cronycles I. 410 At the houre of ix. theyr mynstrels blewe vp on highe.
1530 J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 459/1 He bloweth in a trompet.
c1540 (?a1400) Destr. Troy 1308 Þe kyng..henttes his horne and hastily blawes.
1602 Returne fr. Parnassus (Arb.) ii. v. 29 There is an excellent skill in blowing for the terriers.
1611 Bible (King James) Judges vii. 18 I blow with a trumpet. View more context for this quotation
a1882 H. W. Longfellow Michael Angelo Blow, ye bright angels, on your golden trumpets.
1889 A. Barrère & C. G. Leland Dict. Slang I. 135/2 To blow up (i.e., to sound the whistle), is to call the men to work; used by foremen and ga[n]gers.
1954 J. B. G. Thomas On Tour vi. 65 The referee blew up to see who was actually lying on the ball.
c. Of the blast or note: To sound.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > musical sound > sound of instruments > sound [verb (intransitive)] > wind instruments > note on
blowa1616
a1616 W. Shakespeare Henry V (1623) iii. i. 5 When the blast of Warre blowes in our eares. View more context for this quotation
1852 Ld. Tennyson Ode Wellington iii Let the mournful martial music blow.
** To blow a fire, and the like.
16. transitive. To direct a current of air against (anything) so as to cool, warm, or dry it. Sometimes with words expressing the effect of the action as complement, as to blow(something) dry.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > gas > air > moving air > set (air) in motion [verb (transitive)] > direct current of air at
blowa1398
wind1605
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add. 27944) (1975) II. xv. cxxxviii. 805 Stones ben ydiggede þat ben strongeliche yblowe wiþ fuyre and turneþ to brasse and metalle.
1566 T. Drant tr. Horace Medicinable Morall sig. Eiij All the reaste mighte blow their nayles.
1593 W. Shakespeare Venus & Adonis sig. Bij To fan, and blow them drie againe she seekes. View more context for this quotation
a1658 J. Cleveland News from Newcastle (new ed.) in Wks. (1687) 290 And in embroidered Buck-skins blows his Nails.
1841 F. Marryat Joseph Rushbrook II. iii. 61 The winter was cold..and he blew his fingers.
1850 Ld. Tennyson In Memoriam lxx. 98 Blasts that blow the poplar white. View more context for this quotation
17.
a. esp. To direct a current of air into (a fire), in order to make it burn more brightly. Also with up.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > properties of materials > temperature > heat > burning > burn or consume by fire [verb (transitive)] > make a fire > direct current of air into fire
blowa1300
puffc1475
bellows1605
wind1605
ventilate1613
fan1887
a1300 Havelok 913 Y wile..The fir blowe, an ful wele maken.
1530 J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 458/2 Where be the bellowes, I praye the, blowe the fyre.
1611 Bible (King James) Isa. liv. 16 The smith that bloweth the coales in the fire. View more context for this quotation
1631 W. Gouge Gods Three Arrowes iv. xiii. 391 Yet were..the sparkes of that fire so blowne up, as dazled the eyes.
1678 J. Moxon Mech. Exercises I. i. 8 The Phrase Smiths use..is Blow up the Fire, or sometimes, Blow up the Coals.
1781 W. Hayley Triumphs of Temper i. 374 Chemic fires, that patient labour blows.
1830 J. W. Warter tr. Aristophanes Acharnians 29 The sparks, blowed with a favourable puff of the bellows, leap aloft.
b. figurative. to blow the fire: to stir up or promote strife; to fan the flame of discord. Cf. to blow the coals at coal n. Phrases 3a.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > dissent > be in dissension or at variance [verb (intransitive)] > cause dissension
to make strife1303
to make the feathers flyc1430
to stir the coals1539
to make mischiefc1572
to blow the bellows1590
to blow the fire1670
to stir the pot1826
to stir (also rouse) the possum1900
to mix it1950
1670 C. Cotton tr. G. Girard Hist. Life Duke of Espernon ii. vii. 309 The Chancellor..had also help'd to blow the fire.
c. to blow out: (a) transitive to extinguish (a flame) by a current of air; (b) intransitive to be extinguished by a current of air; (figurative) to expire, die.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > properties of materials > temperature > coldness > extinguishing fire > extinguish (fire) [verb (transitive)] > by current of air
to blow out1377
the world > matter > light > darkness or absence of light > make dark [verb (transitive)] > quench (light) > in specific way
flapc1540
puff1547
purge1573
to blow out1617
spit1681
shoot1972
the world > matter > properties of materials > temperature > coldness > extinguishing fire > become extinguished [verb (intransitive)]
quench?c1225
aquencha1250
to wax outc1400
slockc1485
slocken1535
to burn out, forth1597
extinguish1599
squench1643
to blow out1842
1377 W. Langland Piers Plowman B. xvii. 212 As þow seest some tyme sodeynliche a torche, The blase þere-of yblowe out.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Taming of Shrew (1623) ii. i. 135 Though little fire growes great with little winde, yet extreme gusts will blow out fire. View more context for this quotation
1617 P. Baynes in C. H. Spurgeon Treasury of David (1882) VI. Ps. cxix. 29 As candles new bloun out are soon bloun in again.
1665 R. Boyle Occas. Refl. vi. iv. sig. Nn5v A Candle..inclosed in a Lanthorn..'tis in less danger to be blown out.
1839 C. Dickens Nicholas Nickleby viii. 65 Squeers..opened the shutters and blew the candle out.
1842 Ld. Tennyson Goose xiii, in Poems (new ed.) I. 233 The glass blew in, the fire blew out.
1845 W. G. Simms Wigwam & Cabin 1st Ser. 58 I reckon I was clean gone, if it hadn't been that she blowed out before me.
18. figurative. To excite, inflame, arouse, fan (feeling, passion, discord, etc.; rarely, a person to some feeling or action). Usually with up. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > passion > ardour or fervour > ardent or fervent [verb (transitive)] > heighten intensity of passion
blow?c1225
?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 188 Ȝef þe feont bitwenen ow toblaweð ei wreððe.
1654 G. Goddard in T. Burton Diary (1828) (modernized text) I. Introd. p. xciii These two interests..being constantly blown up by the enemies beyond the seas.
1677 A. Yarranton England's Improvem. To Rdr. They..blow up a War betwixt England and Holland.
1720 J. Ozell et al. tr. R. A. de Vertot Hist. Revol. Rom. Republic I. ii. 118 Finding the People were blown up again to their former Animosity.
1776 E. Gibbon Decline & Fall I. vi. 127 Some trifling accident blew up their discontent into a furious mutiny.
19.
a. In Metallurgy. to blow in: (transitive) to put a blast furnace in operation. to blow out: to put a blast furnace out of blast, by ceasing to charge it with fresh materials, and by continuing the blast, until all the contents have been smelted. Also said intransitively of the furnace.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > working with tools or equipment > work with tools or equipment [verb (transitive)] > furnace or kiln > put into operation
to blow in1864
society > occupation and work > industry > working with tools or equipment > work with tools or equipment [verb (transitive)] > furnace or kiln > stop stoking or cause to stop burning
to blow out1864
to fire off1884
society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > explosive material > actions of explosive material [verb (intransitive)] > go off without shattering rock
to blow out1864
1864 Daily Tel. 26 Oct. It was a question..of allowing half the furnaces in the district to blow out.
1881 Sat. Rev. 1 May 565 127 new furnaces have now been blown in.
1885 Law Times 79 188/2 A few workmen only were kept on until the furnaces could be blown out.
b. to blow on: (transitive) to solder on by means of the blow-lamp.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > working with specific materials > working with metal > work with metal [verb (transitive)] > solder > with specific technique or material
braze1678
plumba1722
soft-solder1769
spelter1861
tin1873
silver-solder1889
to blow on1893
1893 Spons' Mechanics' Own Bk. (ed. 4) 641 Lead the pipe away to the main supply, and ‘blow’ it on by means of a union suited to the case.
c. intransitive. Of a fuse: to melt under an abnormally high electric current; to fuse. Also with out. Also transitive, to cause (a fuse) to melt. Hence figurative (colloquial).
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > physics > electromagnetic radiation > electricity > circuit > fuse > [verb (intransitive)]
fuse1887
blow1902
the world > action or operation > failure or lack of success > fail or be unsuccessful [verb (intransitive)] > melt or burn out
blow1925
the world > matter > physics > electromagnetic radiation > electricity > circuit > fuse > furnish with fuse [verb (transitive)] > cause failure
to burn out1924
blow1949
fuse1951
1902 in Webster's Internat. Dict. Eng. Lang. Suppl.
1908 Installation News 2 86/1 A fuse has blown owing to a fault on the circuit.
1925 P. G. Wodehouse Carry on, Jeeves viii. 188 However firmly and confidently he started off, somewhere around the third bar a fuse would blow out.
1949 S. J. Perelman Listen to Mocking Bird x. 120 Relax..or you'll blow a fuse.
1962 A. Battersby Guide to Stock Control ix. 81 If a fuse blows at home, the effect is immediate—the lights go out.
1969 Woman's Own 1 Nov. 15/1 This means plugging all three appliances into one 13 amp. socket. Are you likely to blow a fuse?
20. transitive. To cast (of molten metal). Obsolete.
ΚΠ
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 6503 A goldin calf þar-of þai blu.
1483 W. Caxton tr. J. de Voragine Golden Legende 61/3 They haue made to them a Calf blowen and haue worshyped it.
*** To clear (a pipe, etc.) by blowing.
21. transitive. To clear from mucus or other adherent matter by sending a current of air through; as, to blow the nose, to blow eggs, blow gas or water pipes.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > cleaning > cleaning or cleanliness of the person > clean the person [verb (transitive)] > clean the nose
snitec1305
to blow the nose?1533
snot1576
?1533 G. Du Wes Introductorie for to lerne Frenche sig. Ci v To blowe the nose, le mouchér.
1615 T. Overbury et al. New & Choise Characters with Wife (6th impr.) sig. L3 Hee hath learn't to cough, and spit, and blow his nose.
1795 ‘P. Pindar’ Pindariana 201 He blows..his mean pug-nose.
1828 W. Sewell Oxf. Prize Ess. 80 Socrates..had done what he rarely did, washed, put on a pair of shoes, and blown his nose.
1880 Wood in Boy's Own Paper 24 Apr. Do not worry yourself about blowing the eggs at the time.
1887 N.E.D. at Blow Mod. The plumber will try whether the obstruction can be removed by blowing the pipe.
**** To inflate by blowing.
22.
a. transitive. To swell (up or out) by sending a current of air into; to inflate, puff up.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > gas > air > [verb (transitive)] > inflate
abloweOE
blowc1425
inflate1528
huff1601
sufflate1616
puff1679
plima1691
balloon1906
c1425 Seven Sag. (P.) 1523 Hys body was al to-blaw.
a1475 Liber Cocorum (Sloane) (1862) 26 Þe skyn þou opon..blaw hym with penne; Þenne ryses þo skyn before.
c1550 J. Balfour Practicks 379 Challenge of Fleshouris..That they blaw the flesh, and cause it seme fat and fair.
1674 J. Ray N. Countrey Words in Coll. Eng. Words 48 Tharm..guts prepared, cleansed, and blown up for to receive puddings.
1770 A. Young Six Months Tour N. Eng. I. 65 Boys blowing bladders.
1871 B. Jowett in tr. Plato Dialogues II. 33 Because a man has blown himself out like a bladder.
b. To form or shape by means of inflation, as to blow bubbles, blow glass. Const. simply, or up, out.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > gas > air > moving air > set (air) in motion [verb (transitive)] > form (bubbles) by blowing
blow1589
society > occupation and work > industry > working with specific materials > working with glass > work with glass [verb (transitive)] > specific processes
blow1589
grind1651
centre1688
muff1877
muffle1908
1589 J. Lyly Pappe with Hatchet D iiij Not like to glasse mettal, to be blowne in..fashion of euerie mans breath.
1660 R. Boyle New Exper. Physico-mechanicall ii. 40 Glass bubles, such as are wont to be blown at the flame of a Lamp.
1869 J. Tyndall Notes on Light (1873) ii. 66 Spending his days in blowing soap-bubbles.
1875 R. Hunt & F. W. Rudler Ure's Dict. Arts (ed. 7) II. 659 The bulb of glass being put into the mould, and blown while very hot.
c. Veterinary Medicine. To cause (the stomach of an animal) to swell. (Cf. blowing n.1 2d.) Also reflexive.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > ill health > animal disease or disorder > disorders of cattle > of cattle: become diseased [verb (transitive)] > swell stomach
blow1776
1776 W. Marshall Minutes Agric. 16 Jan. (1778) Perhaps it was the core of a cabbage which blowed the cow.
1893 G. E. Dartnell & E. H. Goddard Gloss. Words Wilts. 14 Sheep and cattle ‘blow’ themselves, or get ‘blowed’, from overeating when turned out into very heavy grass or clover, the fermentation of which often kills them on the spot, their bodies becoming terribly inflated with wind.
23.
a. figurative. To inflate or puff up (a person) with pride or vanity. Also absol. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > pride > swelling or inflation with pride > inflate with pride [verb (transitive)]
swellc1200
bolnea1340
inblowc1384
blow1388
embolne1430
puff1526
inflate1530
puft1563
tympanize1593
overleaven1604
bladder1610
hufflea1652
bloat1677
1388 Bible (Wycliffite, L.V.) 1 Cor. iv. 19 The word of hem that ben blowun with pride.
1388 Bible (Wycliffite, L.V.) 1 Cor. viii. 1 Kunnynge blowith, charite edifieth.
c1430 Hymns Virg. (1867) 115 Charite..Ne blowen is with pride.
1586 T. Bowes tr. P. de la Primaudaye French Acad. I. 156 Crœsus..he perceiued to be blowne and puft vp with pride.
1651 T. Hobbes Leviathan ii. xxv. 135 When they blow one another with Orations.
a1715 Bp. G. Burnet Hist. Own Time (1724) I. 454 Blown up with popularity.
1718 Mem. Life J. Kettlewell iii. §110. 462 Never Capable of Blowing up his Mind with the least Vanity.
b. figurative. To inflate, enlarge, magnify; to make (a thing) appear greater or grander than it really is. Also, To invent a report of. Usually with up. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > exaggeration, hyperbole > exaggerate [verb (transitive)]
flatter?c1225
engregec1386
enhancec1400
extol?1504
extend1509
aggravate1533
exagger1535
blowa1538
amplify1561
exasperate1561
bombast1566
aggerate1570
enlarge1592
rengrege1601
exaggerate1604
magnify1605
hyperbolize1609
to slobber over ——1761
bloat1896
over-heighten1904
overpitch1904
overblow1961
inflate1982
a1538 T. Starkey Let. in Eng. in Reign Henry VIII (1878) i. p. xxxvii Blowyng vp that authoryte wyth such arrogancy.
1666 S. Pepys Diary 2 Jan. (1974) VIII. 2 That we at Court do blow up a design of invading us.
1699 R. Bentley Diss. Epist. Phalaris (new ed.) Pref. p. vi I had no apprehension..that the Business could have been blown to this Hight.
1711 J. Addison Spectator No. 39. ¶6 A Vulgar [sentiment] that is blown up with all the Sound and Energy of Expression.
c. In Photography, to blow up: to enlarge (a photograph, etc.). colloquial.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > photography > photographic processes > [verb (transitive)] > enlarge
enlarge1866
to blow up1930
1930 Pop. Sci. Monthly Jan. 27/3 The little sixteen-millimeter film of such cameras is too small for projection..and when it is ‘blown up’ to standard size, the images often blur.
1959 Punch 21 Oct. 337/3 I blew up the two faces on an epidiascope.
1961 G. Millerson Technique Television Production iii. 29 Reducing the lens angle ‘blows up’ a proportionately smaller area of the centre of the shot, to fill the whole screen.
***** To explode by blowing.
24.
a. transitive. To shatter, destroy, or otherwise act upon by means of explosion. Const. with various adverbs of direction, esp. up; also with such phrases as to atoms and to bits; in technical use often simply to blow, like ‘to blast’.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > manner of action > violent action or operation > make (more) violent [verb (transitive)] > act upon by means of explosion
blow1599
the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > breaking or cracking > break [verb (transitive)] > break to pieces, shatter, or burst > blow up or explode
to blow away1523
blow1599
to blow (shiver, smash, tear, etc.) to or into atoms1612
blast1758
to blow sky-high1823
dynamite1881
lyddite1906
the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > destroy [verb (transitive)] > bring to ruin or put an end to
undoc950
shendOE
forfarea1000
endc1000
to do awayOE
aquenchc1175
slayc1175
slayc1175
stathea1200
tinea1300
to-spilla1300
batec1300
bleschea1325
honisha1325
leesea1325
wastec1325
stanch1338
corrumpa1340
destroy1340
to put awayc1350
dissolvec1374
supplanta1382
to-shend1382
aneantizec1384
avoidc1384
to put outa1398
beshenda1400
swelta1400
amortizec1405
distract1413
consumec1425
shelfc1425
abroge1427
downthringc1430
kill1435
poisonc1450
defeat1474
perish1509
to blow away1523
abrogatea1529
to prick (also turn, pitch) over the perka1529
dash?1529
to bring (also send) to (the) pot1531
put in the pot1531
wipea1538
extermine1539
fatec1540
peppera1550
disappoint1563
to put (also set) beside the saddle1563
to cut the throat of1565
to throw (also turn, etc.) over the perch1568
to make a hand of (also on, with)1569
demolish1570
to break the neck of1576
to make shipwreck of1577
spoil1578
to knock on (in) the head (also rarely at head)1579
cipher1589
ruinate1590
to cut off by the shins1592
shipwreck1599
exterminate1605
finish1611
damnify1612
ravel1614
braina1616
stagger1629
unrivet1630
consummate1634
pulverizea1640
baffle1649
devil1652
to blow up1660
feague1668
shatter1683
cook1708
to die away1748
to prove fatal (to)1759
to knock up1764
to knock (or kick) the hindsight out or off1834
to put the kibosh on1834
to cook (rarely do) one's goose1835
kibosh1841
to chaw up1843
cooper1851
to jack up1870
scuttle1888
to bugger up1891
jigger1895
torpedo1895
on the fritz1900
to put paid to1901
rot1908
down and out1916
scuppera1918
to put the skids under1918
stonker1919
liquidate1924
to screw up1933
cruel1934
to dig the grave of1934
pox1935
blow1936
to hit for six1937
to piss up1937
to dust off1938
zap1976
1599 E. Sandys Europæ Speculum (1632) 76 They may..blow uppe the mines of their adversaries.
1604 W. Shakespeare Hamlet iii. iv. 185 + 8 I will delue one yard belowe their mines, And blowe them at the Moone.
1605 Act 3 Jas. I c. 4 That more than barbarous and horrible attempt to have blowuen up with Gunpowder the Kinge Queene Prince Lordes and Commons.
1679–88 in J. Y. Akerman Moneys Secret Services Charles II & James II (1851) 50 To Thomas Silver, Gunner, for a reward..in blowing up several buildings, and suppressing the late fire.
1709 R. Steele Tatler No. 80. ⁋9 One of our Bombs fell into a Magazine..and blew it up.
1799 J. Robertson Gen. View Agric. Perth 366 The small expence of blowing a few yards of rock.
1801 Duke of Wellington Dispatches (1837) I. 361 After blowing open the gates.
1802 Monthly Mag. 14 31/1 [Robert Fulton] proposes to blow men of war to atoms.
c1880 J. Grant Hist. India I. lxxv. 399/1 The breaching guns..were blown in the touch-hole.
1936 Discovery July 229/1 The old..story that Fulton was the father of the steamboat, blown to bits in favour of the cruelly forgotten John Fitch.
b. to blow any one's brains out: to shoot him through the head (with firearms). Cf. brain n. Phrases 1.
ΚΠ
1816 W. Scott Old Mortality i, in Tales of my Landlord 1st Ser. III. 4 If they attempt an escape, blow their brains out.
c. to blow from (the mouth of) a gun, etc.: to execute summary justice on (a traitor, etc.) by binding him to the muzzle of a gun and firing the piece.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > punishment > capital punishment > execute [verb (transitive)] > shoot
shootc1275
to blow from (the mouth of) a gun1857
1776 Monthly Rev. 55 276 I ordered..the artillery officers to prepare to blow them away.]
1857 Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. Sept. 389/1 That if there be 10,000 who refuse to use them, they are to be blown away from cannon.
1885 Cent. Mag. Jan. 411/2 That Black Idol..Was..Blown hellward from the cannon's mouth.
1893 W. S. Gilbert Rosencrantz & Guildenstern 11 The Bench of Bishops seize you..And blow you from a gun.
d. Shooting. To shatter (a game bird) in shooting; more explicitly to blow to pieces. So (U.S. slang) to blow apart.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > death > killing > killing by specific method > kill [verb (transitive)] > by shooting
shootc893
shootc1275
to blow away1523
carry1653
to shoot (a person) down1845
stop1845
blow1871
ventilate1875
Maxim1894
poop1917
to blow apart1920
smoke1926
clip1927
cowboy1941
zap1942
Sten-gun1949
to light up1967
slot1987
1892 W. W. Greener Breech-loader 275 I defy any one, after a day's shooting, to point out a single bird that has been ‘blown’. My experience has proved beyond doubt that the choke-bore does not blow pheasants or any other game to pieces at 20 yards.
1920 C. E. Mulford Johnny Nelson iv. 45 ‘Squint,’ said his captor in a hard, level voice, ‘if you give me th' least excuse I'll blow you apart.’
e. To remove by the force of an explosion; with adverbs away, back, off.
ΚΠ
1899 Westm. Gaz. 13 July 7/2 Cartridges in which the caps have been blown back when the rifle was discharged.
f. to blow the lid off (figurative): to expose (a state of affairs). Originally U.S.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > manifestation > disclosure or revelation > disclose or reveal [verb (transitive)]
unwryc825
unhelec1000
to draw forthc1175
unhillc1200
to bring forth?c1225
unsteekc1250
let witc1275
uncovera1300
wraya1300
knowc1300
barea1325
shrivec1374
unwrapc1374
again-covera1382
nakena1382
outc1390
tellc1390
disclosea1393
cough1393
unhidea1400
unclosec1400
unhaspc1400
bewrayc1405
reveal1409
accusea1413
reveil1424
unlocka1425
unrekec1425
disclude?1440
uncurec1440
utter1444
detect1447
break1463
expose1483
divinec1500
revelate1514
to bring (also put) to light1526
decipher1529
rake1547
rip1549
unshadow1550
to lay to sight1563
uppen1565
unlace1567
unvisor?1571
resign1572
uncloak1574
disshroud1577
spill1577
reap1578
unrip1579
scour1585
unharboura1586
unmask1586
uncase1587
descrya1591
unclasp?1592
unrive1592
discover1594
unburden1594
untomb1594
unhusk1596
dismask1598
to open upc1600
untruss1600
divulge1602
unshale1606
unbrace1607
unveil1609
rave1610
disveil1611
unface1611
unsecret1612
unvizard1620
to open up1624
uncurtain1628
unscreen1628
unbare1630
disenvelop1632
unclothe1632
to lay forth1633
unshroud1633
unmuffle1637
midwife1638
dissecret1640
unseal1640
unmantle1643
to fetch out1644
undisguise1655
disvelop1658
decorticate1660
clash1667
exert1692
disinter1711
to up with1715
unbundlea1739
develop1741
disembosom1745
to open out1814
to let out1833
unsack1846
uncrown1849
to bring (out) in (also into) the open1861
unfrock1866
disbosom1868
to blow the lid off1928
flush1950
surface1955
to take or pull the wraps off1964
1928 Daily Tel. 1 May 9/5 He ‘blew the lid’ off a notorious national condition of affairs.
g. to blow out: (of a cock, valve, etc.) to be driven out by the expansive force of gas or vapour.
ΚΠ
1909 in Webster's New Internat. Dict. Eng. Lang.
h. To produce by blowing or shooting.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > death > killing > killing by specific method > kill [verb (transitive)] > by shooting
shootc893
shootc1275
to blow away1523
carry1653
to shoot (a person) down1845
stop1845
blow1871
ventilate1875
Maxim1894
poop1917
to blow apart1920
smoke1926
clip1927
cowboy1941
zap1942
Sten-gun1949
to light up1967
slot1987
1871 B. Harte East & West: Poems 18 Walker of Murphy's blew a hole through Peters For telling him that he lied.
1891 C. Roberts Adrift in Amer. 153 If you talk to me like that I'll blow a hole through you.
i. to blow one's top (less commonly blow topper): to lose control of oneself through anger, excitement, etc. (see also quot. 1938).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > violent emotion > be affected with violent emotion [verb (intransitive)]
ragea1400
to blow one's top1928
to go haywire1929
to pop (also blow) one's cork1938
to flip one's lid (also wig)1950
wig1955
to go ballistic1981
the mind > emotion > anger > [verb (intransitive)] > become angry
wrethec900
wrothc975
abelghec1300
to move one's blood (also mood)c1330
to peck moodc1330
gremec1460
to take firea1513
fumec1522
sourdc1540
spitec1560
to set up the heckle1601
fire1604
exasperate1659
to fire up1779
to flash up1822
to get one's dander up1831
to fly (occasionally jump, etc.) off (at) the handle1832
to have (also get) one's monkey up1833
to cut up rough, rusty, savage1837
rile1837
to go off the handle1839
to flare up1840
to set one's back up1845
to run hot1855
to wax up1859
to get one's rag out1862
blow1871
to get (also have) the pricker1871
to turn up rough1872
to get the needle1874
to blaze up1878
to get wet1898
spunk1898
to see red1901
to go crook1911
to get ignorant1913
to hit the ceiling1914
to hit the roof1921
to blow one's top1928
to lose one's rag1928
to lose one's haira1930
to go up in smoke1933
hackle1935
to have, get a cob on1937
to pop (also blow) one's cork1938
to go hostile1941
to go sparec1942
to do one's bun1944
to lose one's wool1944
to blow one's stack1947
to go (also do) one's (also a) dingerc1950
rear1953
to get on ignorant1956
to go through the roof1958
to keep (also blow, lose) one's cool1964
to lose ita1969
to blow a gasket1975
to throw a wobbler1985
1928 R. J. Tasker Grimhaven iii. 28 Unless you say ‘blew his top’ or ‘blow his topper’; then it means to go crazy.
1938 New Yorker 12 Mar. 47/2 If he smokes to excess, he blows his top; that is, he gets sick.
1941 Amer. Speech 16 163/2 To blow your top: vocal loss of temper.
1947 J. Steinbeck Wayward Bus 90 He blew his top and lost his job and came bellyaching to Loraine.
1958 Economist 1 Nov. 387/2 This was not just a newly retired officer blowing his top after years of enforced silence.
j. to blow (a person's) mind, to induce hallucinatory experiences (in a person) by means of drugs, esp. LSD; hence transferred, to produce (in a person) a pleasurable (or shocking) sensation.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > effects of drugs > have intoxicating effect on [verb (transitive)] > induce hallucinations
to blow (a person's) mind1967
the mind > emotion > aspects of emotion > effect produced on emotions > have an effect on [verb (transitive)] > with irresistible force
kill1634
to knock sideways1890
to blow (a person's) mind1967
the mind > mental capacity > expectation > feeling of wonder, astonishment > quality of inspiring wonder > be a matter of wonder [verb (intransitive)] > excite wonder
dazzle1649
to take a person's breath (away)1700
impress1736
to make a stare1808
astonish1904
to blow (a person's) mind1967
1966 San Francisco Examiner & Chron. 12 June 33/3 The Barry Goldberg Blues Band..does an LP called ‘Blowin' My Mind’.]
1967 San Francisco Examiner 12 Sept. 26/3 On a hip acid (LSD) trip you can blow your mind sky-high.
1967 San Francisco Chron. 2 Oct. 49/3 Because when the Red Sox rallied to beat the Minneapolis Twins..Boston fans blew their minds.
1968 J. D. MacDonald Pale Grey for Guilt (1969) xii. 152 They had some new short acid from the Coast that never gives you a down trip and blows your mind for an hour only.
1970 Rolling Stone 30 Jan. 1/2 Blue blazer, grey flannel pants, shirt and a beautiful scarf with a chunky Mexican turquoise/silver bracelet and ring which blew the white-shirted jury's minds.
25. figurative. to blow up:
a. to destroy, put an end to; to ruin. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > destroy [verb (transitive)] > bring to ruin or put an end to
undoc950
shendOE
forfarea1000
endc1000
to do awayOE
aquenchc1175
slayc1175
slayc1175
stathea1200
tinea1300
to-spilla1300
batec1300
bleschea1325
honisha1325
leesea1325
wastec1325
stanch1338
corrumpa1340
destroy1340
to put awayc1350
dissolvec1374
supplanta1382
to-shend1382
aneantizec1384
avoidc1384
to put outa1398
beshenda1400
swelta1400
amortizec1405
distract1413
consumec1425
shelfc1425
abroge1427
downthringc1430
kill1435
poisonc1450
defeat1474
perish1509
to blow away1523
abrogatea1529
to prick (also turn, pitch) over the perka1529
dash?1529
to bring (also send) to (the) pot1531
put in the pot1531
wipea1538
extermine1539
fatec1540
peppera1550
disappoint1563
to put (also set) beside the saddle1563
to cut the throat of1565
to throw (also turn, etc.) over the perch1568
to make a hand of (also on, with)1569
demolish1570
to break the neck of1576
to make shipwreck of1577
spoil1578
to knock on (in) the head (also rarely at head)1579
cipher1589
ruinate1590
to cut off by the shins1592
shipwreck1599
exterminate1605
finish1611
damnify1612
ravel1614
braina1616
stagger1629
unrivet1630
consummate1634
pulverizea1640
baffle1649
devil1652
to blow up1660
feague1668
shatter1683
cook1708
to die away1748
to prove fatal (to)1759
to knock up1764
to knock (or kick) the hindsight out or off1834
to put the kibosh on1834
to cook (rarely do) one's goose1835
kibosh1841
to chaw up1843
cooper1851
to jack up1870
scuttle1888
to bugger up1891
jigger1895
torpedo1895
on the fritz1900
to put paid to1901
rot1908
down and out1916
scuppera1918
to put the skids under1918
stonker1919
liquidate1924
to screw up1933
cruel1934
to dig the grave of1934
pox1935
blow1936
to hit for six1937
to piss up1937
to dust off1938
zap1976
1660 Sir H. Finch in W. Cobbett Parl. Hist. (1808) IV. 146 He could not think any thing more dangerous than the writing this Book..it blew up this parliament totally, and damned the Act of Oblivion.
1749 Ld. Chesterfield Let. 24 Nov. (1932) (modernized text) IV. 1444 A despatch with less than half these faults would blow you up for ever.
1791 J. Hampson Mem. J. Wesley I. 105 It was reported, that the college censors were going to blow up the Godly Club.
b. To scold, rail at. colloquial.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > disapproval > rebuke or reproof > rebuke or reprove [verb (transitive)] > scold
chidec1230
ban1340
tongue1388
rate1393
flite14..
rehetec1400
janglec1430
chafec1485
rattle1542
berate1548
quarrel1587
hazen?1608
bequarrel1624
huff1674
shrewa1687
to claw away, off1692
tongue-pad1707
to blow up1710
scold1718
rag1739
redd1776
bullyraga1790
jaw1810
targe1825
haze1829
overhaul1840
tongue-walk1841
trim1882
to call down1883
tongue-lash1887
roar1917
to go off at (a person)1941
chew1948
wrinch2009
1710 Duchess of Marlborough Let. in A. T. Thomson Mem. (1839) II. viii. 173 This plainly showed that the cabal had been blowing her up, but that she could not, however, contradict her own order.
1807 G. Colman Let. 10 Dec. in J. C. Young Mem. C. M. Young (1871) I. ii. 47 Now for this I will blow you up!
1828 E. Bulwer-Lytton Pelham II. xviii. 171 Lord Gravelton..was ‘blowing’ up the waiters.
1882 B. D. W. Ramsay Recoll. Mil. Serv. I. iii. 55 He began to blow me up for not having provided quarters for his men and horses.
c. To go to pieces, give out, fail. Chiefly U.S. slang.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > failure or lack of success > fail or be unsuccessful [verb (intransitive)] > collapse or come to nothing
forworthc1000
folda1250
quailc1450
fruster?a1513
to come to nothing1523
to give out?1523
to fall to the ground?1526
quealc1530
to come to, end in, vanish into, smoke1604
intercide1637
to fall to dirt1670
to go off1740
to fall through1770
to fall apart1833
collapse1838
to run into the sand (also, now less commonly, sands)1872
to blow up1934
to blow out1939
1934 in Webster's New Internat. Dict. Eng. Lang.
1957 N. Frye Anat. Crit. iii. 178 An epilogue in Plautus informs us that the slave-actor who has blown up in his lines will now be flogged.
26.
Thesaurus »
a. intransitive. To undergo explosion; to go to pieces by explosion; to erupt. Usually with up.
b. transferred. To give way, collapse.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > downward motion > falling > fall [verb (intransitive)] > collapse
founder1489
sink1530
shrink1590
subside1678
collapse1732
blow1783
1694 London Gaz. No. 2994/3 Two Magazines blew up.
1783 Page in Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 74 13 The work..from the weight upon one part only, might have blown.
1863 C. Kingsley Water-babies vi. 242 The mountain had blown up like a barrel of gunpowder.
c. to blow out (see quot.). Said also of veins of metals; and figurative.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > going or coming out > go or come out [verb (intransitive)] > of something confined > forcibly (of fluid)
to blow out1857
1857 Trans. Illinois State Agric. Soc. 1856–7 2 364 Quantities of the public lands were entered to cover the supposed copper mines. It has all blown out.
1873 J. H. Beadle Undeveloped West xviii. 333 The fluid turned aside to existing crevices, or ‘blew out’ through hollow chambers.
1881 Trans. Amer. Inst. Mining Engineers 1880–1 9 109 Blow-out..a shot or blast is said to blow out when it goes off like a gun and does not shatter the rock.
d. With up. To lose one's temper; to ‘explode’. Cf. sense 24i. colloquial.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > anger > [verb (intransitive)] > become angry
wrethec900
wrothc975
abelghec1300
to move one's blood (also mood)c1330
to peck moodc1330
gremec1460
to take firea1513
fumec1522
sourdc1540
spitec1560
to set up the heckle1601
fire1604
exasperate1659
to fire up1779
to flash up1822
to get one's dander up1831
to fly (occasionally jump, etc.) off (at) the handle1832
to have (also get) one's monkey up1833
to cut up rough, rusty, savage1837
rile1837
to go off the handle1839
to flare up1840
to set one's back up1845
to run hot1855
to wax up1859
to get one's rag out1862
blow1871
to get (also have) the pricker1871
to turn up rough1872
to get the needle1874
to blaze up1878
to get wet1898
spunk1898
to see red1901
to go crook1911
to get ignorant1913
to hit the ceiling1914
to hit the roof1921
to blow one's top1928
to lose one's rag1928
to lose one's haira1930
to go up in smoke1933
hackle1935
to have, get a cob on1937
to pop (also blow) one's cork1938
to go hostile1941
to go sparec1942
to do one's bun1944
to lose one's wool1944
to blow one's stack1947
to go (also do) one's (also a) dingerc1950
rear1953
to get on ignorant1956
to go through the roof1958
to keep (also blow, lose) one's cool1964
to lose ita1969
to blow a gasket1975
to throw a wobbler1985
1871 ‘M. Twain’ Lett. (1917) I. x. 189 Redpath tells me to blow up. Here goes!
1935 A. J. Cronin Stars look Down iii. iii. 497 ‘Good God, Harry,’ Joe blew up dramatically... ‘D'you mean to say it was as bad as that?’
1979 N. Mailer Executioner's Song (1980) ii. x. 652 At this point, Gary blew up, ‘Those sons of bitches, those sons of bitches,’ he kept saying.
III. Senses of doubtful position.
27.
a. transitive. To expose, betray, inform upon. (Formerly sometimes blow up.) Now slang. Cf. 30. Also to blow the gab or gaff (see gab n.3 Phrases 2, gaff n.2 2).
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > information > informing on or against > inform on or against [verb (transitive)]
wrayc725
meldeOE
bimeldena1300
forgabc1394
to blow up?a1400
outsay?a1400
detectc1449
denounce1485
ascry1523
inform1526
promote1550
peach1570
blow1575
impeach1617
wheedle1710
split1795
snitch1801
cheep1831
squeal1846
to put away1858
spot1864
report1869
squawk1872
nose1875
finger1877
ruck1884
to turn over1890
to gag on1891
shop1895
pool1907
run1909
peep1911
pot1911
copper1923
finger1929
rat1932
to blow the whistle on1934
grass1936
rat1969
to put in1975
turn1977
society > communication > manifestation > disclosure or revelation > disclose or make revelations [verb (intransitive)] > disclose or reveal secrets
tell1537
blaba1616
to let the cat out of the bag1760
to blow the gab or gaff1834
to shoot off one's mouth1864
to give the show away1879
unload1904
to spill the beans1919
to shoot the works1922
1575 R. B. Apius & Virginia sig. Civ Was all well agreed, did no body blow ye.
1702 J. Vanbrugh False Friend iv. ii So! she's here!..Now we are blown up!
1741 S. Richardson Pamela IV. xliv. 275 Thou deservest to be blown up, and to have thy Plot spoiled.
1770 J. Langhorne & W. Langhorne tr. Plutarch Lives (1879) II. 1035/1 So near was the great secret being blown.
1801 M. Edgeworth Good Aunt in Moral Tales IV. 98 He was afraid, that the mulatto woman should recollect either his face or voice, and should blow him.
1821 J. G. Lockhart Valerius I. xi. 202 The time is not yet come to blow his private doings.
1834 F. Marryat Peter Simple III. v. 68 I wasn't going to blow the gaff [= let out the secret].
1925 E. Wallace Mind of Mr. J. G. Reeder v. 165 This officer ‘blew’ the raid to Tommy.
1958 G. Greene Our Man in Havana ii. 99 We can't risk blowing him now.
1958 G. Greene Our Man in Havana iii. i. 111 They're anxious you should take no risk of being blown. It doesn't matter so much if I'm blown.
1961 ‘B. Wells’ Day Earth caught Fire vii. 114 You can't go on blaming him for blowing the story you gave him.
b. absol. To tell tales, ‘peach’. (See also 30.)
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > information > informing on or against > inform on or against [verb (intransitive)]
inform1588
peach1598
whistle1599
sing1612
whiddlec1661
squeak1690
wheedle1710
whittle1735
to blow the gab1785
snitch1801
rat1810
nose1811
sing1816
gnarl1819
split1819
stag1839
clype1843
squeal1846
blow1848
to round on1857
nark1859
pimp1865
squawk1872
ruck1884
to come or turn copper1891
copper1897
sneak1897
cough1901
stool1911
tattle-tale1918
snout1923
talk1924
fink1925
scream1925
sarbut1928
grass1929
to turn over1967
dime1970
1848 ‘N. Buntline’ Mysteries & Miseries N.Y. ii. 48 To ‘blow’ would be to tell of some of my stealing.
a1859 L. Hunt Country Lodging in C. Gibbon Casquet of Lit. (1877) I. 42/1 D——n me, if I don't blow..I'll tell Tom Neville.
1928 E. Wallace Gunner xxxiii. 281 If..Mr. Morell..has blown— has told the story of Taffany's, every boat will be watched.
1967 C. Drummond Death at Furlong Post xii. 154 If Ada blows she gets life, they don't like Crown Evidence these days.
28. Said of flies and other insects: To deposit their eggs. [This sense is apparently connected with old notions of natural history. It has nothing to do with the notion of blowing or inflating meat.]
a. transitive (with ‘blotes’ or eggs as obj.) Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > eggs or young > [verb (transitive)] > deposit eggs
blow1607
1607 E. Topsell Hist. Foure-footed Beastes 125 Worms..which are not bigger then such as Flyes blow in rotten flesh.
1657 S. Purchas Theatre Flying-insects 44 They [bees] then blow in it [a cell of the comb] a thing less then, or as little as a flye-blote.
b. absol. or intransitive. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > eggs or young > [verb (intransitive)] > lay eggs
blowa1616
a1616 W. Shakespeare Othello (1622) iv. ii. 69 As summers flies..That quicken euen with blowing . View more context for this quotation
1657 S. Purchas Theatre Flying-insects 44 The matter in which they [bees] blow or breed is something that they gather of the flowers.
1692 T. Wagstaffe Vindic. King Charles xii. 83 It is the Nature of Flies to be ever buzzing, and blowing upon any thing that is raw.
1771 Gullet in Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 62 350 This blows in the ear of the corn, and produces a worm.
c. transitive. To deposit eggs on or in (a place); to fill with eggs. Cf. fly-blown adj.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > eggs or young > [verb (transitive)] > deposit eggs > deposit eggs on
blow1598
blow1650
1598 W. Shakespeare Love's Labour's Lost v. ii. 409 These sommer flies, Haue blowne me full of maggot ostentation. View more context for this quotation
a1616 W. Shakespeare Tempest (1623) iii. i. 63 To suffer The flesh-flie blow my mouth. View more context for this quotation
1650 N. Ward Discolliminium 50 When Eagles are deplum'd, the flyes will blow their breech.
d. with up. rare. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > eggs or young > [verb (transitive)] > deposit eggs > deposit eggs on
blow1598
blow1650
1650 T. Fuller Pisgah-sight of Palestine ii. viii. 172 No wonder if Worms quickly devoured him [sc. Herod], whom those flesh-flies had blown up before. [A word-play on sense 23.]
29. Used informally in imprecations: To curse, ‘confound’, ‘hang’. (The past participle is blowed.) Also with the implication of ignoring or disregarding; blow!: used absol. as an exclamation of anger or vexation; blow me tight! (cf. sense 22).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > malediction > oaths > [verb (transitive)] > oaths other than religious or obscene
confoundc1330
founda1382
hanga1400
whip1609
rat1691
fire1730
repique1760
curse1761
blow1781
blister1840
sugar1886
1781 G. Parker View Society & Manners I. 48 Blow me up (says he) if I have had a fellow with such rum toggys cross my company these many a day.
1819 T. Moore Tom Crib's Memorial to Congress 46 Says Bill, ‘there's nothing like a Bull: And blow me tight.’
1821 P. Egan Life in London iii. 225 Blow me tight if ever I saw such a thing in my life before.
1827 J. Wight More Mornings Bow St. 55 Blow me if I do!
1836 C. Dickens Sketches by Boz 2nd Ser. 184 The said Thomas Sludberry repeated the aforesaid expression, ‘You be blowed’.
1840 F. Marryat Olla Podrida III. 20 If I do, blow me!
1859 C. Dickens Tale of Two Cities ii. i. 36 One blowed thing and another.
1865 C. Dickens Our Mutual Friend II. iv. xv. 287 Blowed if I shouldn't have left out lakes.
1871 Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. May 551/2 Oh, blow it, governor.
1881 Daily Tel. 28 Jan. ‘Isn't it rather risky?’ I asked. ‘Blow risks,’ he answered.
1882 J. A. Lees & W. J. Clutterbuck Three in Norway xxiv. 207 Retributive justice be blowed!
1922 F. Hamilton P. J.: Secret Service Boy ii. 70 I'm absolutely blowed if I know what to do.
1922 F. Hamilton P. J.: Secret Service Boy ii. 84 Oh, blow! And I go back to school in ten days.
1933 P. MacDonald Myst. Dead Police i. 6 ‘Blow me tight!’ said Sergeant Guilfoil. For things were certainly happening in Farnley.
1957 I. Cross God Boy (1958) xv. 124 Then blow me if Dr Hutchinson..didn't come padding round the post office corner.
1963 Listener 28 Mar. 540/1 It is no longer proper to use as our second national motto in education ‘Blow you, Jack, our top five per cent. are absolutely splendid’.
30. to blow up(on) (a person or thing) has been used in various senses (see 30a); among others: To take the bloom off; to make stale or hackneyed; to bring into discredit, defame; also, to tell tales of, inform upon, expose (cf. 27). With indirect passive, to be blown upon (see 30b). In this latter sense the simple blow also occurs transitively (see 30c).
a.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > information > informing on or against > inform on or against [verb (transitive)]
wrayc725
meldeOE
bimeldena1300
forgabc1394
to blow up?a1400
outsay?a1400
detectc1449
denounce1485
ascry1523
inform1526
promote1550
peach1570
blow1575
impeach1617
wheedle1710
split1795
snitch1801
cheep1831
squeal1846
to put away1858
spot1864
report1869
squawk1872
nose1875
finger1877
ruck1884
to turn over1890
to gag on1891
shop1895
pool1907
run1909
peep1911
pot1911
copper1923
finger1929
rat1932
to blow the whistle on1934
grass1936
rat1969
to put in1975
turn1977
the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > disrepute > damage to reputation > slander or calumny > slander or calumniate [verb (transitive)]
to say or speak shame of, on, byc950
teleeOE
sayOE
to speak evil (Old English be) ofc1000
belie?c1225
betell?c1225
missayc1225
skandera1300
disclanderc1300
wrenchc1300
bewrayc1330
bite1330
gothele1340
slanderc1340
deprave1362
hinderc1375
backbite1382
blasphemec1386
afamec1390
fame1393
to blow up?a1400
defamea1400
noise1425
to say well (also evil, ill, etc.) of (also by)1445
malignc1450
to speak villainy of1470
infame1483
injury1484
painta1522
malicea1526
denigrate1526
disfamea1533
misreporta1535
sugill?1539
dishonest?c1550
calumniate1554
scandalize1566
ill1577
blaze1579
traduce1581
misspeak1582
blot1583
abuse1592
wronga1596
infamonize1598
vilify1598
injure?a1600
forspeak1601
libel1602
infamize1605
belibel1606
calumnize1606
besquirt1611
colly1615
scandala1616
bedirt1622
soil1641
disfigurea1643
sycophant1642
spatter1645
sugillate1647
bespattera1652
bedung1655
asperse1656
mischieve1656
opprobriatea1657
reflect1661
dehonestate1663
carbonify1792
defamate1810
mouth1810
foul-mouth1822
lynch1836
rot1890
calumny1895
ding1903
bad-talk1938
norate1938
bad-mouth1941
monster1967
?a1400 Morte Arth. (1819) 47 A monge hem all be fore the dese He bloweth oute vppon the quene, To haue hys ryght.
1634 Malory's Arthur (1816) II. 438 Then Sir Gawaine made many men to blow upon Sir Launcelot, and all at once they called him ‘False recreant Knight!’
1808 J. Jamieson Etymol. Dict. Sc. Lang. at Blaw To Blaw out on one, formally to denounce one as a rebel by three blasts of the king's horn at the market-cross of the head-borough of the shire; an old forensic phrase.
1844 Spirit of Times 20 Jan. 557/2 Go! Get off; I'll not blow on you.
1876 J. Weiss Wit, Humor, & Shakespeare ii. 51 Why..does she not blow upon the doctor?
1877 J. Greenwood Dick Temple II. i. 10 She ain't got nobody but me to keep a secret for her, and I've been and blowed on her.
1916 E. Wallace Clue of Twisted Candle (1918) xvii. 197 I'm not going to blow on it, if it's going to get me into trouble, but if you'll promise me that it won't, I'll tell you the whole story.
1960 ‘W. Haggard’ Closed Circuit viii. 94 There could be only one explanation: Menderez had blown on him.
b.
ΚΠ
1645 J. Howell Epistolæ Ho-elianæ vi. xxxix. 60 I Thank you for the good opinion you..have of my fancy of Trees: It is a maiden one, and not blown upon by any one yet.
1678 J. Norris Coll. Misc. (1699) 325 I wave these, and fix upon another account less Blown upon.
1679 W. Penn Addr. Protestants App. 246 A Man of Wisdom, Sobriety and Ability..if a Dissenter, must be blown upon for a Phanatick.
1709 S. Centlivre Busie Body ii. ii. 26 If I can but keep my Daughter from being blown upon 'till Signeur Babinetto arrives.
1711 J. Addison Spectator No. 105. ¶5 He will..whisper an Intriegue that is not yet blown upon by common Fame.
1712 J. Addison Spectator No. 464. ⁋1 I am wonderfully pleased when I meet with any Passage in an old Greek or Latin Author, that is not blown upon.
1749 H. Fielding Tom Jones IV. x. ii. 15 The Reputation of her House, which was never blown upon before, was utterly destroyed. View more context for this quotation
1845 R. Ford Hand-bk. Travellers in Spain I. i. 17 If once blown upon, no one would employ them.
1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. II. 48 The credit of the false witnesses had been blown upon.
1877 A. M. Sullivan New Ireland xxiii. 276 They had got word that the plot was ‘blown upon’ by some traitor.
c.
ΚΠ
1864 Duke of Manchester Court & Society I. 80 Puebla's character had been somewhat blown.
31. to blow (in) a bowl: to tipple, to be a habitual drunkard. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > drink > thirst > excess in drinking > [verb (intransitive)] > drink habitually
drinka1275
to blow (in) a bowlc1500
use1600
c1500 Blowbols Test. 29 in W. C. Hazlitt Remains Early Pop. Poetry Eng. (1864) I. 93 Many a throw Of good ale bolys that he had i-blowe.
c1530 A. Barclay Egloges i. sig. Diij v To blowe in a bowle, and for to pyll a platter.
32. To treat (someone) to. U.S. slang. Also reflexive. (See also quot. 1889.)
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > providing or receiving food > feed or nourish [verb (transitive)] > entertain with food
feasta1325
festya1382
rehetec1400
cheerc1425
table1457
treata1578
banquet1594
kitchena1616
junket1642
regale1656
collation1662
fete1812
sport1826
sock1842
blow1949
1889 A. Barrère & C. G. Leland Dict. Slang I. 134/1 To blow off, to treat to drinks.
1896 G. Ade Artie xvii. 155 ‘I noticed that you'd been talking bicycle lately, but I didn't know you were going to get one.’ ‘..I'm goin' to do the sucker act and blow myself.’
1903 C. L. Burnham Jewel 97 Father took me to the horse show... He told mother he was going to blow me to it.
1949 A. Miller Death of Salesman 11 Tell Dad, we want to blow him to a good meal.
33. coarse slang. To fellate. Also intransitive, to practise fellatio.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > sexual relations > sexual activity > oral sex > practise oral sex [verb (intransitive)] > fellatio
fellate1884
to suck cock1902
blow1933
nosh1961
to slob (on) someone's knob1989
to slob the knob1989
the world > physical sensation > sexual relations > sexual activity > oral sex > practise oral sex on or with [verb (transitive)] > fellatio
irrumate1887
gam1910
gobble1928
blow1933
fellate1948
cocksuck1954
to suck dicka1956
nosh1961
to polish someone's knob1963
1933 Brevities (N.Y.) 12 Oct. 1 (heading) Sexy sailors blow! Bawdy boys run riot on high seas as fags stir emotions of rollicking rovers.
1941 G. Legman in G. W. Henry Sex Variants II. 1158 Blow, to fellate or cunnilingue, the object being the person, and not the genital organ.
1959 W. S. Burroughs Naked Lunch 86 ‘Darling, I want to blow you,’ she whispers.
1968 J. Updike Couples ii. 148 The bitch won't blow unless she's really looped. What did the Bard say? To fuck is human; to be blown, divine.
1969 P. Roth Portnoy's Complaint 191 ‘I want you to come in my mouth,’ and so she blew me.
1978 M. Puzo Fools Die vi. 82 There was a whole regiment of floozy Nightingales passing through his hotel room, washing him, feeding him and, as they tucked him in, blowing him to make sure he was relaxed enough to get a good night's sleep.

Draft additions September 2013

transitive. Originally U.S. To open (a safe) using explosives. Cf. earlier safe-blower n., safe-blowing n.
ΚΠ
1871 Galaxy Oct. 495 Such famous marauders as..Amos Leeds (who was happily killed while blowing a safe).
1900 Overland Monthly July 58 Just..fix the engineer and messenger while they blow the safe.
1951 P. G. Wodehouse Old Reliable iv. 51 Are you a safeblower magically gifted with the art of buttling, or a butler who has somehow picked up the knack of blowing safes?
1976 Irish Times 19 July 9/5 Burglars hit an oil depot in Navan, and having watched all the right TV serials, tried to blow the safe.
2005 J. Kaplan Contact Wounds (2007) 210 He's..joined up with these bank robbers and there's been an explosion when they tried to blow the safe and it went wrong.

Draft additions September 2013

transitive. Baseball. To pitch (a ball) at high speed by or past an opponent. Also in extended use in other sports.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > baseball > play baseball [verb (transitive)] > actions of pitcher
pitch1848
curve1877
to put over1891
scatter1892
save1899
to put across1903
walk1905
fan1909
plunk1909
southpaw1911
whiff1914
sidearm1921
sidearm1922
outpitch1928
blow1938
hang1967
wild pitch1970
1938 Washington Post 3 June 21/1 Pitching overhand, he literally blew the ball past the batter, but he was not utterly reliant on his fast one.
1952 Afro-Amer. 10 May 15 Work on your curve; you can't blow it by these guys up here.
1964 Call & Post (Cleveland, Ohio) 24 Oct. c1/6 That is the way he pitched in the World Series, hard and fast... He simply blew the ball past those Yanks.
1995 Pittsburgh Post-Gaz. (Nexis) 1 June e13 He's really powerful, though, with his groundstrokes. He just blew the ball past me a few times.
2010 M. Dobrow Knocking on Heaven's Door xx. 266 He couldn't blow the ball by hitters anymore, and the ‘power curve’ just wasn't as sharp.

Draft additions October 2001

transitive. Originally U.S. To cause (the engine of a motor vehicle, esp. a racing car) to break down, esp. through overloading or overheating. Also intransitive, of an engine: to break down.
ΚΠ
1960 Guide to Drag Racing (Fremont Drag Strip) 11/1 Blew, engine trouble of various types, ‘He blew’.
1962 Washington Daily News 30 July 43/3 Dick Brannan, South Bend, Ind., turned 112.92 with his '62 Ford in the warm-ups but blew his engine in the Bond runs.
1978 Detroit Free Press 5 Mar. c2 Ricardo Patrese..seized the lead on the 29th lap, built a sizable edge and blew his engine on the 63d lap.
1986 Grand Prix Internat. July 46/3 The session was interrupted again after Palmer's engine had blown, setting fire to the rear of his Zakspeed.
1998 Indianapolis Star 25 Jan. b9/1 Last year's disappointing run, where he led 131 of 149 laps before blowing an engine just before the race was red-flagged by rain.

Draft additions July 2009

intransitive. North American slang. To be contemptible, tiresome, or disagreeable; = suck v. 15f.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > goodness and badness > inferiority or baseness > worthlessness > [verb (intransitive)]
to eat shit1942
blow1960
suck1971
bite1975
1960 R. Reuss & G. Legman in J. E. Lighter Hist. Dict. Amer. Slang (1994) I. 198/2 Hell Week really blows!
1986 H. B. Gilmour Pretty in Pink 81 That won't change the fact that this school blows.
1999 J. Bendinger Cheer Fever (film script) (O.E.D. Archive) 77 Fine. But..this blows. It sucked before and now it blows.
2003 Chicago Tribune (Midwest ed.) 21 Sept. vii. 18/1 I judge a hotel by how good its cheeseburger is... I don't care how many stars it has, if the cheeseburger blows, then I'm getting a different hotel.

Draft additions October 2001

to blow away
1. transitive. To destroy or obliterate in an explosion, or with a firearm; to subject to an explosion, to blow up; (in extended use) to ruin, devastate. Also (now chiefly U.S. slang): to shoot dead. Frequently in passive.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > destroy [verb (transitive)] > bring to ruin or put an end to
undoc950
shendOE
forfarea1000
endc1000
to do awayOE
aquenchc1175
slayc1175
slayc1175
stathea1200
tinea1300
to-spilla1300
batec1300
bleschea1325
honisha1325
leesea1325
wastec1325
stanch1338
corrumpa1340
destroy1340
to put awayc1350
dissolvec1374
supplanta1382
to-shend1382
aneantizec1384
avoidc1384
to put outa1398
beshenda1400
swelta1400
amortizec1405
distract1413
consumec1425
shelfc1425
abroge1427
downthringc1430
kill1435
poisonc1450
defeat1474
perish1509
to blow away1523
abrogatea1529
to prick (also turn, pitch) over the perka1529
dash?1529
to bring (also send) to (the) pot1531
put in the pot1531
wipea1538
extermine1539
fatec1540
peppera1550
disappoint1563
to put (also set) beside the saddle1563
to cut the throat of1565
to throw (also turn, etc.) over the perch1568
to make a hand of (also on, with)1569
demolish1570
to break the neck of1576
to make shipwreck of1577
spoil1578
to knock on (in) the head (also rarely at head)1579
cipher1589
ruinate1590
to cut off by the shins1592
shipwreck1599
exterminate1605
finish1611
damnify1612
ravel1614
braina1616
stagger1629
unrivet1630
consummate1634
pulverizea1640
baffle1649
devil1652
to blow up1660
feague1668
shatter1683
cook1708
to die away1748
to prove fatal (to)1759
to knock up1764
to knock (or kick) the hindsight out or off1834
to put the kibosh on1834
to cook (rarely do) one's goose1835
kibosh1841
to chaw up1843
cooper1851
to jack up1870
scuttle1888
to bugger up1891
jigger1895
torpedo1895
on the fritz1900
to put paid to1901
rot1908
down and out1916
scuppera1918
to put the skids under1918
stonker1919
liquidate1924
to screw up1933
cruel1934
to dig the grave of1934
pox1935
blow1936
to hit for six1937
to piss up1937
to dust off1938
zap1976
the world > life > death > killing > killing by specific method > kill [verb (transitive)] > by shooting
shootc893
shootc1275
to blow away1523
carry1653
to shoot (a person) down1845
stop1845
blow1871
ventilate1875
Maxim1894
poop1917
to blow apart1920
smoke1926
clip1927
cowboy1941
zap1942
Sten-gun1949
to light up1967
slot1987
the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > breaking or cracking > break [verb (transitive)] > break to pieces, shatter, or burst > blow up or explode
to blow away1523
blow1599
to blow (shiver, smash, tear, etc.) to or into atoms1612
blast1758
to blow sky-high1823
dynamite1881
lyddite1906
1523 J. Skelton Goodly Garlande of Laurell sig. Cii The blaste of ye byrnston blew away his brayne.
a1586 Sir P. Sidney Arcadia (1590) iii. xxvi. sig. Yy7v I heard of my friendes being besieged, and so came to blowe away the wretches that troubled him.
1627 W. Hawkins Apollo Shroving ii. iii. 27 Blow away your enemy out of the field with one blast.
1679 F. Beaumont Knight of Burning Pestle v. i. 65 Ralph.: What's become o'th' nose of your flaske? 1 Sold.: Indeed law Captain, 'twas blown away with powder.
1778 F. Pilon Invasion ii. 33 If the enemy have any artillery, all the under part of the house will be blown away at the first discharge.
1831 J. Wilson Unimore v, in Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. Aug. 156 Generations have been blown away By war in foreign lands.
1900 H. D. Rawnsley Ballads of War 5 His whole right hand had been blown away.
1939 in A. Banks First-person Amer. (1981) 251 A bunch of them wops showed up in a car n tried to blow him away.
1994 Star-Ledger (Newark, New Jersey) 24 Apr. iii 5/3 HYM was blown away by a sudden drop in the price of several investments derived on Wall Street from the imaginative selling and reselling of common homeowner mortgages.
2001 People (Electronic ed.) 1 July He stood over his kneeling victim and listened to his frantic pleas before blowing him away.
2. transitive. slang (originally U.S.). To disprove or demolish (an argument, etc.) forcefully and emphatically; to show to be false or unfounded, to discredit.
ΚΠ
1959 R. Heywood Sixth Sense 103 But the epiphenomenalistic bosh..that's simply blown away. It's one of the blind alleys of human thought.
1966 R. Giallombardo Society of Women App. B. (Gloss.) 201 Blow away, to silence by forceful argument, to talk belligerently.
1987 Skin Diver Aug. 131/1 That sort of blows away all their theories on growth rates of black coral.
1992 Enroute (Air Canada) Sept. 8/2 (advt.) Sony Compact Audio Systems. With one press of the remote, you'll quickly and soundly blow away the myth that bigger is better.
3. transitive. slang (originally U.S.). To defeat convincingly (esp. at sport); to surpass (a rival or competitor); (Jazz) to outperform (a fellow musician). Cf. earlier to blow out at sense 4a.The use among jazz musicians, though most obviously derived from sense 14e, shows the influence of other uses (sense 12a and to blow away vb.). Although attested later here, it has been suggested that this use in Jazz is the origin of the more general sense: see Comments on Etymol. (1989) Jan. 9.
ΚΠ
1974 Washington Post 1 July d6/2 The classic matchup—the king of sport against the unknown kid—was settled quickly. ‘The kid knocked me right off. He blew me away.’
1976 C. Calloway & B. Rollins Of Minnie the Moocher & Me 73 Each band would play a couple of sets, trying to blow the other band away.
1986 World Boxing Sept. 54/2 Bruno blew away journeyman Larry Frazier in less than two rounds.
1990 Videographic Apr. 29/1 Obviously it is far slower than something like Paintbox, but its versatility blows Paintbox away.
1999 BBC Top Gear Mag. June 43/1 For the first time since they blew away the opposition in 1937–39, the awesome Mercedes W154 GP cars are returning to Donington.
4. transitive. slang (originally U.S.). To astonish, delight, or thrill; to impress extremely, to overwhelm. Cf. to blow (a person's) mind at sense 24j.Perhaps related to the slightly earlier blown away ‘intoxicated with drink or drugs’: see blown adj.1
ΚΠ
1974 J. M. Young et al. We are being played or blown Away (Library of Congress MS sheet music) (Eu 478437) Blown, blown, blown away By my soft, tequila-fingered lady.
1975 Washington Post 24 May e32/4 (cartoon caption) Days like this just blow me away—seems like all the world's at peace with itself.
1988 G. Lees Meet me at Jim & Andy's viii. 135 They were hot. They blew the Monterey Festival away that year.
1995 Q June 102/3 You Really Got Me by The Kinks. I heard it when I was at school and it really blew me away.

Draft additions October 2001

to blow a kiss and variants: to gesture as if to kiss someone at a remove but within one's view, esp. to kiss the tips of one's fingers and blow across them towards the recipient(s) as a gesture of affection or farewell. Also figurative.Frequently with recipient as indirect object.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > indication > gesturing or gesture > hand gesture > [verb (intransitive)] > finger gesture > other finger gestures
fillip1577
to blow a kiss1611
1611 L. Emley in T. Coryate Crudities sig. iv And Germany, since thee she needs must misse, In kind remembrance blowes thee a full kisse.
1677 A. Behn Rover ii. i. 21 (stage direct.) Antonio..bows and blows up kisses.
1765 I. Bickerstaff Maid of Mill ii. viii. 38 Blow me a kiss, In pledge-promis'd truth, that's all. Farewell!
1812 H. Smith & J. Smith Rejected Addr. 10 If you'll blow to me a kiss, I'll blow a kiss to you.
1891 T. Hardy Tess of the D'Urbervilles II. xxi. 9 They all three blew him a silent kiss.
1908 L. M. Montgomery Anne of Green Gables viii. 87 Anne blew a couple of airy kisses from her fingertips past the cherry blossoms.
1969 Sunday Times 9 Nov. 24/8 A personable girl was waving to me, blowing kisses.
1991 Rolling Stone 21 Feb. 33 The Caribbean breeze meets the native funk, and together they blow a big kiss at the turistas.

Draft additions October 2001

transitive. to blow off: (a) (now U.S. slang) to rebuff, to reject the advances of (a person); to ignore, disregard, dismiss; (b) U.S. slang, to shirk or evade (a job or duty), to stay away from (school or work) without permission or good reason.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > inattention > ignoring, disregard > ignore, disregard [verb (transitive)]
fordita800
forheedc1275
forget1297
to let out ofa1300
spele1338
to go beside ——a1382
waivec1400
remiss?a1425
to go by ——?c1450
misknowledge?a1475
misknow1483
misken1494
to go besides ——1530
to let pass1530
unregard1545
unmind1562
overlook1570
mislippen1581
suspend1581
omit1589
blanch1605
to blow off1631
disregard1641
to pass with ——1641
to give (a person or thing) the go-by1654
prescind1654
nihilify1656
proscribe1680
unnotice1776
ignore1795
to close one's mind1797
cushion1818
to leave out in the cold1839
overslaugh1846
unheed1847
to write off1861
to look through ——1894
scrub1943
the mind > language > statement > refusal > [verb (transitive)] > rebuff
rebut1488
reject1529
counterbuff1579
rebuffa1586
repel1593
slighta1616
to blow off1631
squab1812
respue1818
snout1916
stiff-arm1927
to knock back1930
to brush off1941
1631 B. Jonson New Inne ii. vi. sig. D2 Blow him off good Pru, they'l mar all else.
1668 E. Howard Usurper iv. 54 Clean.: Remember he's your Son. Dam.: Thus I blow off that name.
1856 W. S. Landor Anthony & Octavius viii. 74 Let him brush kings away and blow off queens.
1947 B. Schulberg Harder they Fall xv. 253 I was just thinking like a moon-struck freshman when I was..deciding to blow Nick off.
1968 F. M. Spillane Killer Mine 14 I'm a cop, plain and simple. But I'm just cop enough to blow off a job I don't want to get fixed into.
1975 S. Bellow Humboldt's Gift (1976) 440 ‘And where is she?’ I didn't answer. ‘She blew you off. I see.’
1988 J. McInerney Story of my Life ii. 29 Did you blow off work, I ask, and he says he called in and said he was taking the day off, he had one coming.
1993 Coloradoan (Fort Collins) 30 May c4/2 Don't obsess, but don't blow it off as useless information, say health professionals.

Draft additions October 2001

transitive. to blow out of the water: (a) literal to propel out of water by the force of an explosion; (b) figurative (colloquial) to expose ruinously, to show (a person, idea, or scheme) to lack all credibility or potential; to bring about the downfall of, esp. by sudden, drastic, decisive action.
ΚΠ
1748 T. Smollett Roderick Random II. lxv. 321 This discovery had an evident effect upon the sailors, who did not scruple to say, that we should be tore to pieces, and blown out of the water.
1785 F. Pilon Fair Amer. iii. 58 I'll send him a challenge, and make him eat his words; or he shall blow old Cable out of the water.
1803 G. Huddesford Bonaparte xii. 20 When Nelson with Brueys And his ships play'd the deuce, Burnt, captur'd, or sunk, or blown out of the water.
1846 G. W. Lovell Look before you Leap v. ii. 75 Tom: Oh, there is such a row! (Runs out, L.)Spriggs: I've blown him out of the water. Fanny: Oh, Jack, you have ruined him!
1860 H. R. Shipley Privateer's Cruise ii. 22 Why that craft can blow us out of the water in a couple of broadsides; she throws a weight of metal treble our own.
1959 S. H. Adams Tenderloin xxxix. 330 If I can find a way I'll blow the whole damned investigation right out of the water.
1979 J. Cassidy Station in Delta vi. 77 You do everything by the book, or..I'll blow you right out of the water!
1984 J. Bedford Titron Madness xiv. 122 There aren't enough of us to search the ship... We could still be looking for it when they blow us out of the water.
1997 Daily Mail 15 Jan. 52/5 Things finally seem to be looking up for Kelly—which is more than can be said for Biff, whose romantic plans are blown out of the water by Linda.

Draft additions October 2001

to blow out
1. transitive. slang (chiefly U.S.). To defeat convincingly (esp. at sport); (Jazz) to outperform (a fellow musician).The use among jazz musicians may have arisen independently, perhaps influenced by sense 14e: see Comments on Etymol. (1989) Jan. 9–10.
ΚΠ
1892 W. J. Florence Gentleman's Handbk. Poker 91 When a big bet is made which drives out the other players, they are sometimes said to be ‘blown out’.
1956 ‘B. Holiday’ & W. Dufty Lady sings Blues iv. 56 Chu was sitting there and everybody started arguing as to who could blow out whom, trying to promote a [saxophone-playing] competition between Lester and Chu.
1978 Washington Post 11 June d6/6 Before the injuries, we were getting to a point where we were feeling we could blow out anyone.
1980 N.Y. Times 3 June b2/1 ‘We'll blow them out,’ said Mr. Shiel, who has already said he intends to run for Mayor.
1991 Sports Illustr. 4 Mar. 58/2 They're blowing out everybody. They are as good a women's college team as I've ever seen.
1998 Boxing Monthly Apr. 45/2 Mercer easily blows out New Jersey bodybuilder.
2. intransitive. slang. Of a person: to be unsuccessful, fail; to perform badly. Of a situation, plan, etc.: to fall through, go wrong; to come to nothing.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > failure or lack of success > fail or be unsuccessful [verb (intransitive)]
withsitc1330
fail1340
defaulta1382
errc1430
to fall (also go) by the wayside1526
misthrive1567
miss1599
to come bad, or no, speedc1600
shrink1608
abortivea1670
maroon1717
to flash in the pan1792
skunk1831
to go to the dickens1833
to miss fire1838
to fall flat1841
fizzle1847
to lose out1858
to fall down1873
to crap out1891
flivver1912
flop1919
skid1920
to lay an egg1929
to blow out1939
to strike out1946
bomb1963
to come (also have) a buster1968
the world > action or operation > failure or lack of success > fail or be unsuccessful [verb (intransitive)] > collapse or come to nothing
forworthc1000
folda1250
quailc1450
fruster?a1513
to come to nothing1523
to give out?1523
to fall to the ground?1526
quealc1530
to come to, end in, vanish into, smoke1604
intercide1637
to fall to dirt1670
to go off1740
to fall through1770
to fall apart1833
collapse1838
to run into the sand (also, now less commonly, sands)1872
to blow up1934
to blow out1939
1939 H. Hodge Cab, Sir? xv. 221 When a cabman puts on a theatre or restaurant rank, and gets first just as the lights go out and the door shuts, he has ‘blown out’.
a1969 J. Kerouac Visions of Cody (1972) 374 Everything blew out on that Cadillac trip East, there's nothing left.
1970 P. Laurie Scotl. Yard (App.) Blow out, to, for a case, theory, accusation, to fall down.
1992 Atlantic Sept. 50/2 Many of these families had biological children who were doing very well. But these adopted kids seemed to be blowing out left and right.
3. North American Sport slang. (a) intransitive, (of a part of one's body) to become ineffective through injury; (b) transitive, to injure (a part of one's body).
ΚΠ
1984 G. Nettles & P. Golenbock Balls vii. 92 His back blew out on him.
1984 Sports Illustr. 30 Apr. 63/2 Fingers..blew out his arm in September 1982 during Milwaukee's drive to the American League pennant.
1992 Golf Monthly May 174/1 Mediate grew up as a baseball pitcher, but turned to golf when he blew out his arm trying to snap a curve ball.
2000 U.S. News & World Rep. 24 Jan. 56/2 He blew out his knee playing basketball.
4. transitive. Chiefly British. To let (a person) down or shut (a person) out; to rebuff, reject the advances of (a person). Also: to fail to keep (an appointment), esp. deliberately, to jilt; to shirk. Cf. earlier to blow off at Additions.
ΚΠ
1987 Classic Racer Summer 60/1 Then at the last minute Florian's wife..nipped over to the factory, swung the deal in favour of Florian and blew me out.
1989 Melody Maker 25 Nov. 7/4 After blowing out shows at Hammersmith Odeon by missing his Concorde flight, Jerry called up his PR people in London to say..he'd missed two more planes.
1991 J. Phillips You'll never eat Lunch in this Town Again (1992) 90 We have a brief conference and blow out the meeting anyway.
1996 V. Walters Rude Girls xiii. 273 His face had a blank expression. Shree had just blown him out in a big way, but no one would be able to tell.
1999 J. Lloyd & E. Rees Come Together iii. 68 I was drunk and I'd been blown out so many times in the last hour that I'd dismissed the idea of pulling from my mind.

Draft additions October 2001

transitive. to blow a gasket.
a. literal. To have a gasket (gasket n. 3) come loose due to excess pressure.
ΚΠ
1907 Michigan Rep. 149 373 He was cleaning out some beer tanks in the cellar when a rubber gasket blew out from between the flanges.]
1928 Federal Reporter 2nd Ser. 27 891/2 [He] lost his lift because of the blowing out of a gasket, resulting in the ignition of gases or crude oil from the engine.
1944 Q. Reynolds Curtain Rises iv. 94 This car needs to have its valves ground... Its gears are stripped and we are a cinch to blow a gasket.
1969 Surf Internat. (Austral.) I. xi. 13 Nat and Paul push the woodie, it's stoked too, an' finally blows its gasket.
1991 R. R. McCammon Boy's Life i. vi. 81 Old Moses made a noise like a locomotive about to blow its gaskets.
b. figurative (colloquial). (a) (Of a person) to become ill, collapse; (of an organization, situation, etc.) to break down, go wrong (rare); (b) to lose one's temper or self-control, to become uncontrollably angry; cf. to blow a fuse, sense 19c.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > anger > [verb (intransitive)] > become angry
wrethec900
wrothc975
abelghec1300
to move one's blood (also mood)c1330
to peck moodc1330
gremec1460
to take firea1513
fumec1522
sourdc1540
spitec1560
to set up the heckle1601
fire1604
exasperate1659
to fire up1779
to flash up1822
to get one's dander up1831
to fly (occasionally jump, etc.) off (at) the handle1832
to have (also get) one's monkey up1833
to cut up rough, rusty, savage1837
rile1837
to go off the handle1839
to flare up1840
to set one's back up1845
to run hot1855
to wax up1859
to get one's rag out1862
blow1871
to get (also have) the pricker1871
to turn up rough1872
to get the needle1874
to blaze up1878
to get wet1898
spunk1898
to see red1901
to go crook1911
to get ignorant1913
to hit the ceiling1914
to hit the roof1921
to blow one's top1928
to lose one's rag1928
to lose one's haira1930
to go up in smoke1933
hackle1935
to have, get a cob on1937
to pop (also blow) one's cork1938
to go hostile1941
to go sparec1942
to do one's bun1944
to lose one's wool1944
to blow one's stack1947
to go (also do) one's (also a) dingerc1950
rear1953
to get on ignorant1956
to go through the roof1958
to keep (also blow, lose) one's cool1964
to lose ita1969
to blow a gasket1975
to throw a wobbler1985
the mind > emotion > anger > [verb (intransitive)] > become angry > become unduly angry
to have a cow1959
to get one's knickers in a twist1971
to blow a gasket1975
1946 Liberty 1 June 36/3 Better slow down, old man, or you'll blow a gasket.
1959 Jrnl. Higher Educ. 30 449 I am against trustee control of the curriculum... Even if they give it back graciously..to such a ‘new mechanism’ as a ‘rededicated, revitalized and strengthened Committee of the Faculty’... I have seen too many dedicated and vitalized mechanisms blow a gasket to feel otherwise.
1975 Daily Colonist (Victoria, Brit. Columbia) 22 May 2 No matter how many times you've blown a gasket about a speeding ticket or some other minor infraction, the policeman is still your friend.
1995 Sun 26 Apr. (TV Suppl.) 4/3 Lilly's big romantic evening blows a gasket.
1999 Yahoo! Internet Life Dec. 89 There is one sure way to make great science fiction writers blow a gasket..: Ask them to predict the future.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1887; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

blowv.2

Brit. /bləʊ/, U.S. /bloʊ/
Forms: Past tense blew /bl(j)uː/. Past participle blown /bləʊn/. Forms: Old English blówan, Middle English blowen, Middle English–1600s blowe, 1500s– blow. past tense Old English bléow, Middle English bleou, ( bloude). past participle Old English ( ge)blówen, (Middle English blowe), 1500s– blown.
Etymology: Old English blówan , 3rd singular bléwp , past tense bléow , past participle blówen , represented in the other West Germanic languages by weak verbs, Old Saxon blôjan (Middle Dutch and Dutch bloeien ), Old High German bluojan (Middle High German blüejen , blüen , modern German blühen ), pointing to an Old Germanic strong verb *blôjan , from root blō- , cognate with Latin flōs , flōrem flower, flōrēre to bloom; compare bloom n.1, blossom n., blade n., blede n. Already in Old English the past tense coincided with that of bláwan , blow v.1, and in Middle English the two verbs ran together in form.
1.
a. intransitive. To burst into flower; to blossom, bloom.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > part of plant > reproductive part(s) > flower or part containing reproductive organs > flower or flowering plant > be a flowering plant [verb (intransitive)] > flower or blossom
blossomc890
blowc1000
flower13..
blooma1325
breakc1325
lancec1330
flourishc1386
to break up?a1500
knopa1584
effloresce1775
outbreak1870
c1000 Sax. Leechd. I. 98 Ðonne heo grewð & blewð.
c1200 Trin. Coll. Hom. 177 Trewes growen, blouwen and bereð blostmen.
c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1963) l. 1008 Bi-heold he þene wode hu he bleou [c1300 Otho bloude].
c1400 in Coll. Ordinances Royal Househ. (1790) 472 April, May, and June, while that trees blowen.
1578 H. Lyte tr. R. Dodoens Niewe Herball v. xxi. 578.
1600 W. Shakespeare Midsummer Night's Dream ii. i. 249 I know a banke where the wilde time blowes . View more context for this quotation
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost vii. 319 These scarce blown, Forth flourish't thick the clustring Vine. View more context for this quotation
1697 J. Dryden tr. Virgil Pastorals iii, in tr. Virgil Wks. 13 The Blossoms blow; the Birds on bushes sing.
1855 Ld. Tennyson Daisy in Maud & Other Poems 138 Here and there,..A milky-bell'd amaryllis blew.
b. transferred.
ΚΠ
c1430 Hymns Virg. (1867) 69 Now seiþ he, he loued me to longe, For myn heer bigynneþ to blowe.
2. figurative. To flourish, bloom; to attain perfection.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > prosperity > prosper or flourish [verb (intransitive)]
theec888
i-thee971
bloomc1175
flower?c1225
soundfula1300
fructifya1325
timea1325
to bear the bloom1330
flourisha1340
prosperc1350
thrive?a1366
blossom1377
cheve1377
burgeona1382
likec1400
upthrivec1440
avail1523
fadge1573
to bear a great, high or lofty sail1587
blow1610
to be (also stand) in state1638
fatten1638
sagaciate1832
to be going strong1855
1610 J. Guillim Display of Heraldrie iii. viii. 110 Our flowry youth..It growes, it blowes, it spreds, it sheds her beauty in one day.
1676 J. Dryden Aureng-Zebe Prol. Wit in Northern Climates will not blow.
1842 Ld. Tennyson Talking Oak xix, in Poems (new ed.) II. 68 In these latter springs I saw Your own Olivia blow.
3. transitive. To cause to blossom. literal or figurative ? Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > part of plant > reproductive part(s) > flower or part containing reproductive organs > flower or flowering plant > be or affect a flowering plant [verb (transitive)] > cause to flower or blossom
blow1635
gem1667
1635 W. Habington Castara (ed. 2) ii. 166 The enamor'd Spring by kissing blowes Soft blushes on her [the rose's] cheeke.
1746 M. Delany Autobiogr. & Corr. (1861) II. 417 Houses built up for blowing auriculas.
1801 M. Edgeworth Rosamond iii. 78 in Early Lessons v Directions for blowing bulbous-rooted flowers.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1887; most recently modified version published online December 2021).

> see also

also refers to : blow-comb. form
<
n.11488n.2?1611n.31710v.1c1000v.2c1000
see also
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