释义 |
Definition of puffed in English: puffedadjective pʌfdpəft 1also puffed outBritish Out of breath. he felt puffed after climbing to the top of the apartment block Example sentencesExamples - He was wearing dark shorts and a dark singlet with old white runners when he approached the girl and he was puffed out after having run up to her.
- We started jogging and after the first one, he was puffed out.
- After ten minutes or so, when the poor little puffed-out chap was having a breather, a smaller bird (most probably his wife, judging by the way she pecked him in the head six times) appeared and took over.
Synonyms out of breath, breathless, short of breath, puffed out, panting, puffing, huffing and puffing, puffing and blowing, gasping, gasping for breath, wheezing, wheezy, winded, short-winded informal out of puff 2Swollen. symptoms include puffed eyelids Example sentencesExamples - He had about a million marshmallows in his mouth now and he looked like a big puffed-up chipmunk.
- Expressionless except for his puffed cheeks, he blew his whistle twice, signaling us to fall in line behind the school's back door.
- The Shiv Sena chief has puffed eyes and dark under-eye circles, thanks to ceaseless barking by stray canines in the vicinity of the Thackeray residence, Matoshri, in Bandra East.
- As the Queen's Guard played the national anthem I had expected puffed-out chests, hands on hearts and the proud defiance you normally associate with The Star Spangled Banner.
- And there are a lot more stalls of trinkets, puffed rice and coconuts on the pavement: Proof of burgeoning demand.
- The salt water caused the kernels to swell and the puffed grain filled the hold with a fluffy nature's life preserver.
- Won't the day come when puffed-out collagen-lips will seem as incomprehensible as giant shoulder pads?
- Make sure that you show everyone the puffed-up bags before you open them and tip the contents into warm bowls.
- I will help you see to it that the heart behind those puffed-out pecs will never be stepped on so publicly again.
- He sees puffed-out chests as lads square off to prove who's more masculine.
- All these people should find out about that, because you want to know which foods, like a puffed rice cake is one of the worst things that you can eat, even though it's nonfat and seems like an austere diet food.
- Then again, the last century exposed human beings to many new things (plastics, antibiotics, puffed food products) and we live longer than ever.
- Basically, any kind of puffed grain (no jokes, please) and I'm there.
- We were mighty proud of our personalized statement of annualized, culturally-mandated love for the woman nearest our hearts, and our puffed chests told the world just that.
- At the same time wings are drooped and body plumage puffed-out.
- It is about oversized, puffed-out proportions and dramatic silhouettes.
- Days are no longer fuelled by ‘hamburger flavoured puffed wheat snacks’ and improbably flavoured, highly coloured fizzy pop.
- Tesha raised an eyebrow and poked Marl in the stomach, deflating his puffed-up chest.
- Bake in a bain-marie in the oven for 45 minutes to 1 hour, or until slightly puffed-up and spongy.
- Courtship ceremonies are delightful: the cock slowly circles the hen with puffed-out breast feather, depressed wings and fanned tail.
- 2.1 (of a sleeve or other part of a garment) gathered so as to have a rounded shape.
a dress with huge puffed sleeves Example sentencesExamples - Black hose revealed a well-turned leg, disappearing into puffed pumpkin hose, richly embroidered and paned in black on black.
- The garters Willie had made me from leftover elastic used for her customer's puffed sleeves that had fit me snugly were suddenly too loose.
- Their gowns were fine velvet and silk, with puffed shoulders and cascading trains.
- It is garnished in silk and satin with puffed sleeves.
- This is a floor-length, brightly colored cloth dress with a square neckline and short, puffed sleeves.
- It can be hard to find that perfect Elvis-style shirt - something in pink and black with a tall collar, say, or a velvet number with puffed sleeves.
- Locating them instantly, she threw on a pair of worn jeans, a red long-sleeved shirt, and a black puffed vest.
- She pulled out faded articles of clothing at first, but then she came to a long, purple, sparkling dress with puffed sleeves, a low, scooping neckline, and a wide, full skirt.
- It seems logical that the incredible headdresses, the folded, puffed and knotted clothes, are all designed to make the wearer look bigger, taller and more impressive.
- Pigtails, puffed sleeves in check cotton, bare midriff and a skirt that definitely wouldn't need tucking up in the milking shed.
- She wore a flowing pale yellow skirt with ruffles and a silken blouse with puffed sleeves.
- The tunic with puffed sleeves isn't going to cut it.
- Summertime brings out the little girl in all of us: bubble-gum pink, flirty skirts, puffed sleeves.
- Anne of Green Gables felt more confident when she got her dress with puffed sleeves.
- At other tables, several pasty-faced types in puffed-out shirts lazily gorged themselves on cruisers' cuisine.
- The Eighties influence makes itself felt again in party wear, with slashed necklines, puffed sleeves, waists and skirts, halterneck tops and the accessory of accessories: the belt.
- I am also wearing a pale pink blouse with puffed short sleeves, and a hot pink singlet, and mismatching earrings, one a mid-pink heart shape, and one a pale pink circle with a hole in the middle.
- With puffed sleeves and white lace rims, she finished off her look.
- Cream colored, with puffed sleeves, a skirt decorated with ribbons filled out with many layers of petticoats underneath and an extremely tight bodice.
- Women wore a huipil with short, puffed sleeves, a tightly wrapped skirt called a refajo, and a large, bright cotton cloth on the head.
- 2.2 Denoting grains of wheat, rice, etc. that have been expanded through treatment with high-pressure steam, used especially in breakfast cereals and snack foods.
combine the rolled oats and puffed rice with the cinnamon, cardamom, and sea salt Example sentencesExamples - I never want to see another grain of puffed wheat in my life.
- Foods with high glycemic indexes, including white rice, watermelon, puffed wheat and rice, and baked potatoes, contain carbohydrates that break down quickly.
- Those who ate the rolled oats were able to cycle significantly longer than those who ate the puffed rice, due to greater glucose availability.
- As a cook, he may be a little too fond of traditional English ingredients like suet and American novelties like puffed wheat and canned corn.
- The puffed grains are then dried off before they can collapse.
- The company limited the distribution of products like chile and lime puffed wheat snacks to smaller mom-and-pop retail operations in Mexican-dominated areas.
- Snacks include fruits such as banana, mango, and jackfruit, as well as puffed rice and small fried food items.
- It is pulling its unsweetened puffed rice, unsweetened puffed rice, and puffed wheat cereals from store shelves.
Definition of puffed in US English: puffed(also puffed up) adjectivepəftpəft 1Swollen. Example sentencesExamples - All these people should find out about that, because you want to know which foods, like a puffed rice cake is one of the worst things that you can eat, even though it's nonfat and seems like an austere diet food.
- We were mighty proud of our personalized statement of annualized, culturally-mandated love for the woman nearest our hearts, and our puffed chests told the world just that.
- At the same time wings are drooped and body plumage puffed-out.
- Expressionless except for his puffed cheeks, he blew his whistle twice, signaling us to fall in line behind the school's back door.
- He sees puffed-out chests as lads square off to prove who's more masculine.
- The salt water caused the kernels to swell and the puffed grain filled the hold with a fluffy nature's life preserver.
- Basically, any kind of puffed grain (no jokes, please) and I'm there.
- The Shiv Sena chief has puffed eyes and dark under-eye circles, thanks to ceaseless barking by stray canines in the vicinity of the Thackeray residence, Matoshri, in Bandra East.
- Days are no longer fuelled by ‘hamburger flavoured puffed wheat snacks’ and improbably flavoured, highly coloured fizzy pop.
- Won't the day come when puffed-out collagen-lips will seem as incomprehensible as giant shoulder pads?
- Tesha raised an eyebrow and poked Marl in the stomach, deflating his puffed-up chest.
- It is about oversized, puffed-out proportions and dramatic silhouettes.
- Courtship ceremonies are delightful: the cock slowly circles the hen with puffed-out breast feather, depressed wings and fanned tail.
- And there are a lot more stalls of trinkets, puffed rice and coconuts on the pavement: Proof of burgeoning demand.
- Make sure that you show everyone the puffed-up bags before you open them and tip the contents into warm bowls.
- Then again, the last century exposed human beings to many new things (plastics, antibiotics, puffed food products) and we live longer than ever.
- As the Queen's Guard played the national anthem I had expected puffed-out chests, hands on hearts and the proud defiance you normally associate with The Star Spangled Banner.
- I will help you see to it that the heart behind those puffed-out pecs will never be stepped on so publicly again.
- He had about a million marshmallows in his mouth now and he looked like a big puffed-up chipmunk.
- Bake in a bain-marie in the oven for 45 minutes to 1 hour, or until slightly puffed-up and spongy.
- 1.1 (of a sleeve or other part of a garment) gathered so as to have a rounded shape.
Example sentencesExamples - The garters Willie had made me from leftover elastic used for her customer's puffed sleeves that had fit me snugly were suddenly too loose.
- Their gowns were fine velvet and silk, with puffed shoulders and cascading trains.
- It seems logical that the incredible headdresses, the folded, puffed and knotted clothes, are all designed to make the wearer look bigger, taller and more impressive.
- She pulled out faded articles of clothing at first, but then she came to a long, purple, sparkling dress with puffed sleeves, a low, scooping neckline, and a wide, full skirt.
- With puffed sleeves and white lace rims, she finished off her look.
- This is a floor-length, brightly colored cloth dress with a square neckline and short, puffed sleeves.
- Pigtails, puffed sleeves in check cotton, bare midriff and a skirt that definitely wouldn't need tucking up in the milking shed.
- At other tables, several pasty-faced types in puffed-out shirts lazily gorged themselves on cruisers' cuisine.
- I am also wearing a pale pink blouse with puffed short sleeves, and a hot pink singlet, and mismatching earrings, one a mid-pink heart shape, and one a pale pink circle with a hole in the middle.
- It can be hard to find that perfect Elvis-style shirt - something in pink and black with a tall collar, say, or a velvet number with puffed sleeves.
- It is garnished in silk and satin with puffed sleeves.
- Black hose revealed a well-turned leg, disappearing into puffed pumpkin hose, richly embroidered and paned in black on black.
- Anne of Green Gables felt more confident when she got her dress with puffed sleeves.
- The Eighties influence makes itself felt again in party wear, with slashed necklines, puffed sleeves, waists and skirts, halterneck tops and the accessory of accessories: the belt.
- She wore a flowing pale yellow skirt with ruffles and a silken blouse with puffed sleeves.
- Cream colored, with puffed sleeves, a skirt decorated with ribbons filled out with many layers of petticoats underneath and an extremely tight bodice.
- Summertime brings out the little girl in all of us: bubble-gum pink, flirty skirts, puffed sleeves.
- Women wore a huipil with short, puffed sleeves, a tightly wrapped skirt called a refajo, and a large, bright cotton cloth on the head.
- Locating them instantly, she threw on a pair of worn jeans, a red long-sleeved shirt, and a black puffed vest.
- The tunic with puffed sleeves isn't going to cut it.
- 1.2 Denoting grains of wheat, rice, etc., that have been expanded through treatment with high-pressure steam, used especially in breakfast cereals and snack foods.
combine the rolled oats and puffed rice with the cinnamon, cardamom, and sea salt Example sentencesExamples - Those who ate the rolled oats were able to cycle significantly longer than those who ate the puffed rice, due to greater glucose availability.
- It is pulling its unsweetened puffed rice, unsweetened puffed rice, and puffed wheat cereals from store shelves.
- I never want to see another grain of puffed wheat in my life.
- The puffed grains are then dried off before they can collapse.
- Snacks include fruits such as banana, mango, and jackfruit, as well as puffed rice and small fried food items.
- As a cook, he may be a little too fond of traditional English ingredients like suet and American novelties like puffed wheat and canned corn.
- Foods with high glycemic indexes, including white rice, watermelon, puffed wheat and rice, and baked potatoes, contain carbohydrates that break down quickly.
- The company limited the distribution of products like chile and lime puffed wheat snacks to smaller mom-and-pop retail operations in Mexican-dominated areas.
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