释义 
		[ bluhb -er ] SHOW IPA 
/ ˈblʌb ər / PHONETIC RESPELLING 
SEE SYNONYMS FOR blubber  ON THESAURUS.COM
noun Zoology . the fat layer between the skin and muscle of whales and other cetaceans, from which oil is made. 
excess body fat. 
an act of weeping noisily and without restraint. 
verb (used without object) to weep noisily and without restraint: Stop blubbering and tell me what's wrong.  
verb (used with object) to say, especially incoherently, while weeping: The child seemed to be blubbering something about a lost ring.  
to contort or disfigure (the features) with weeping. 
adjective disfigured with blubbering; blubbery: She dried her blubber eyes.  
fatty; swollen; puffed out (usually used in combination): thick, blubber lips; blubber-faced.  
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Origin of blubber  1250–1300; Middle English bluber  bubble, bubbling water, entrails, whale oil; apparently imitative
OTHER WORDS FROM blubber blub·ber·er,  noun blub·ber·ing·ly,  adverb Words nearby blubber  blowup, blowy, BLS, BLT, blub, blubber , blubberhead, blubbery, blucher, bludge, bludgeon
Dictionary.com UnabridgedBased on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2020
Example sentences from the Web for blubber Scott does not come off as a conventionally conceived gigglebox made of blubber .
Ladies’ Night | Stanley Crouch| March 29, 2009| DAILY BEAST
The blubber  is esteemed the most delicate part; but even the skin is eaten, although it requires much cooking in the oven.
Voyage Of H.M.S. Rattlesnake, Vol. 2 (of 2) | John MacGillivray
They subsisted on shell fish, putrid whale's blubber , or a few tasteless berries and fungi.
An Introduction to the History of Science | Walter Libby
Petersen saw and fired a shot into a narwhal, which brought the blubber  out.
In the Arctic Seas | Francis Leopold McClintock
The amount of seal and sea-elephant steak and blubber  consumed by our hungry party was almost incredible.
South! | Sir Ernest Shackleton
In winter, blubber  and meat are put away upon these pillars, which are sufficiently high to keep them from the dogs.
The Central Eskimo | Franz Boas
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British Dictionary definitions for  blubber verb to sob without restraint 
to utter while sobbing 
(tr)  to make (the face) wet and swollen or disfigured by crying 
SEE MORE SEE LESS noun a thick insulating layer of fatty tissue below the skin of aquatic mammals such as the whale: used by man as a source of oil 
informal  excessive and flabby body fat 
the act or an instance of weeping without restraint 
Australian  an informal name for jellyfish
SEE MORE SEE LESS adjective (often in combination)  swollen or fleshy blubber-faced ; blubber-lips 
Derived forms of blubber blubberer , noun Word Origin for blubber C12: perhaps from Low German blubbern  to bubble , of imitative origin
Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
Content related to blubber Take An Aquarium Word Trip With Dictionary.com And Georgia AquariumTo help you get into full teacher and tour-guide mode, we've teamed up with the Georgia Aquarium to put together an educational language guide for you to reference as you're exploring the aquarium with your kids.
Words related to blubber whale, sob, wail, swell, whimper, whine, fat, nettle, seethe, swollen, thick, weep, flab, flitch, blub
Scientific definitions for  blubber The thick layer of fat between the skin and the muscle layers of whales and other marine mammals. It insulates the animal from heat loss and serves as a food reserve. 
The American Heritage® Science Dictionary Copyright © 2011. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.