a bag made of thin rubber or other light material, usually brightly colored, inflated with air or with some lighter-than-air gas and used as a children's plaything or as a decoration.
a bag made of a light material, as silk or plastic, filled with heated air or a gas lighter than air, designed to rise and float in the atmosphere and often having a car or gondola attached below for carrying passengers or scientific instruments.
(in drawings, cartoons, etc.) a balloon-shaped outline enclosing words represented as issuing from the mouth of the speaker.
an ornamental ball at the top of a pillar, pier, or the like.
a large, globular wineglass.
ChemistryNow Rare. a round-bottomed flask.
verb (used without object)
to go up or ride in a balloon.
to swell or puff out like a balloon.
to multiply or increase at a rapid rate: Membership has ballooned beyond all expectations.
verb (used with object)
to fill with air; inflate or distend (something) like a balloon.
adjective
puffed out like a balloon: balloon sleeves.
Finance. (of a loan, mortgage, or the like) having a payment at the end of the term that is much bigger than previous ones.
Origin of balloon
1570–80; <Upper Italian ballone, equivalent to ball(a) (<Langobardic; see ball1) + -one augmentative suffix; or <Middle French ballon<Upper Italian
Yet the costs of law enforcement are ballooning and, according to City Council members, unsustainable.
Morning Report: Oceanside Reboots Top Cop Search|Voice of San Diego|September 14, 2020|Voice of San Diego
Zhong isn’t the only one whose fortune has ballooned from Nongfu’s trading debut.
A blockbuster IPO briefly made a bottled water entrepreneur China’s richest man|Grady McGregor|September 8, 2020|Fortune
Perhaps this is why search interest in SEO itself, which was largely stagnant from mid-2017 to early this year, has ballooned.
SEO in the second half of 2020: Five search opportunities to act on now|Jim Yu|August 17, 2020|Search Engine Watch
In a brief moment of rapid expansion, that burst of energy inflated the cosmos like a balloon.
Big Bounce Simulations Challenge the Big Bang|Charlie Wood|August 4, 2020|Quanta Magazine
Future satellites or weather balloons could provide data on whether this has happened, says Pengfei Yu.
Australian wildfires pumped smoke to record heights|Maria Temming|July 27, 2020|Science News For Students
Manned, unmanned, a balloon, a kite—you still have to get the information into the hands of the firefighters.
Fighting Wildfire With Satellites, Lasers, and Drones|Elizabeth Lopatto|July 9, 2014|DAILY BEAST
A balloon popped and the sound was enough like a gunshot to make everybody jump.
What if the Founding Fathers Saw Newtown?|Michael Daly|December 13, 2013|DAILY BEAST
But soon before he could get to work, he lost control of the balloon he had designed and built himself.
This Week’s Hot Reads: Dec. 2, 2013|Mythili Rao and Thomas Flynn, Mythili Rao, Thomas Flynn|December 2, 2013|DAILY BEAST
Taking your cues from Koons is like singing inside a balloon.
From Lady Gaga To Jay-Z, “Serious” Art Is Ruining Pop Music|James Poulos|November 24, 2013|DAILY BEAST
Eyebrows Cressida: Imagine eyebrows drawn on a balloon with a blackened cork.
Cressida Bonas vs. Cara Delevingne: A Differentiation Guide to Two Celebrity English Roses|Tom Sykes|June 26, 2013|DAILY BEAST
Further, there is provided means for admitting air at will into the balloon, by which the necessity for much ballast is obviated.
The Dominion of the Air|J. M. Bacon
First crossing of the English Channel in a balloon—Blanchard, 1785.
The Story of Great Inventions|Elmer Ellsworth Burns
Nothing remained to hinder the balloon from ascending but the hands and weight of those who were holding on to it with ropes.
Erewhon|Samuel Butler
We got another glimpse of the balloon to cheer us, and were also edified in the course of the day with news of the Belmont battle.
The Siege of Kimberley|T. Phelan
"Yes, the basket goes up with the balloon," said Mrs. Bobbsey.
The Bobbsey Twins at the County Fair|Laura Lee Hope
British Dictionary definitions for balloon
balloon
/ (bəˈluːn) /
noun
an inflatable rubber bag of various sizes, shapes, and colours: usually used as a plaything or party decoration
a large impermeable bag inflated with a lighter-than-air gas, designed to rise and float in the atmosphere. It may have a basket or gondola for carrying passengers, etcSee also barrage balloon, hot-air balloon
a circular or elliptical figure containing the words or thoughts of a character in a cartoon
British
a kick or stroke that propels a ball high into the air
(as modifier)a balloon shot
chema round-bottomed flask
a large rounded brandy glass
commerce
a large sum paid as an irregular instalment of a loan repayment
(as modifier)a balloon loan
surgery
an inflatable plastic tube used for dilating obstructed blood vessels or parts of the alimentary canal
(as modifier)balloon angioplasty
go down like a lead ballooninformalto be completely unsuccessful or unpopular
when the balloon goes upinformalwhen the trouble or action begins
verb
(intr)to go up or fly in a balloon
(intr)to increase or expand significantly and rapidlylosses ballooned to £278 million
to inflate or be inflated; distend; swellthe wind ballooned the sails