外部链接:    leo英德   dict有道 百度搜索百度 google谷歌 google图片 wiki维基 百度百科百科   

 blown [blon]   添加此单词到默认生词本
a. 吹制的, 喘气的, 开着花的
blow的过去分词

[机] 吹出的, 喷出的


  1. The candle was blown out by the wind.
    蜡烛被风吹灭了。
  2. My hat was blown off while I was crossing the bridge.
    过桥时风吹掉了我的帽子。
  3. Beware your hat, lest it should be blown away.
    当心你的帽子别被吹走。


blown
[ adj ]
  1. being moved or acted upon by moving air or vapor

  2. <adj.all>
    blown clouds of dust choked the riders
    blown soil mounded on the window sill
  3. breathing laboriously or convulsively

  4. <adj.all>


Blow \Blow\ (bl[=o]), v. i. [imp. {Blew} (bl[=u]); p. p. {Blown}
(bl[=o]n); p. pr. & vb. n. {Blowing}.] [OE. blowen, AS.
bl[=o]wan to blossom; akin to OS. bl[=o]jan, D. bloeijen,
OHG. pluojan, MHG. bl["u]ejen, G. bl["u]hen, L. florere to
flourish, OIr. blath blossom. Cf. {Blow} to puff,
{Flourish}.]
To flower; to blossom; to bloom.

How blows the citron grove. --Milton.


Blow \Blow\, v. i. [imp. {Blew} (bl[=u]); p. p. {Blown}
(bl[=o]n); p. pr. & vb. n. {Blowing}.] [OE. blawen, blowen,
AS. bl[=a]wan to blow, as wind; akin to OHG. pl[=a]jan, G.
bl["a]hen, to blow up, swell, L. flare to blow, Gr.
'ekflai`nein to spout out, and to E. bladder, blast, inflate,
etc., and perh. blow to bloom.]
1. To produce a current of air; to move, as air, esp. to move
rapidly or with power; as, the wind blows.

Hark how it rains and blows ! --Walton.

2. To send forth a forcible current of air, as from the mouth
or from a pair of bellows.

3. To breathe hard or quick; to pant; to puff.

Here is Mistress Page at the door, sweating and
blowing. --Shak.

4. To sound on being blown into, as a trumpet.

There let the pealing organ blow. --Milton.

5. To spout water, etc., from the blowholes, as a whale.

6. To be carried or moved by the wind; as, the dust blows in
from the street.

The grass blows from their graves to thy own. --M.
Arnold.

7. To talk loudly; to boast; to storm. [Colloq.]

You blow behind my back, but dare not say anything
to my face. --Bartlett.

8. To stop functioning due to a failure in an electrical
circuit, especially on which breaks the circuit; sometimes
used with out; -- used of light bulbs, electronic
components, fuses; as, the dome light in the car blew out.
[PJC]

9. To deflate by sudden loss of air; usually used with out;
-- of inflatable tires.
[PJC]

{To blow hot and cold} (a saying derived from a fable of
[AE]sop's), to favor a thing at one time and treat it
coldly at another; or to appear both to favor and to
oppose.

{To blow off}, to let steam escape through a passage provided
for the purpose; as, the engine or steamer is blowing off.


{To blow out}.
(a) To be driven out by the expansive force of a gas or
vapor; as, a steam cock or valve sometimes blows out.
(b) To talk violently or abusively. [Low]

{To blow over}, to pass away without effect; to cease, or be
dissipated; as, the storm and the clouds have blown over.


{To blow up}, to be torn to pieces and thrown into the air as
by an explosion of powder or gas or the expansive force of
steam; to burst; to explode; as, a powder mill or steam
boiler blows up. ``The enemy's magazines blew up.''
--Tatler.


Blown \Blown\, p. p. & a.
1. Swollen; inflated; distended; puffed up, as cattle when
gorged with green food which develops gas.

2. Stale; worthless.

3. Out of breath; tired; exhausted. ``Their horses much
blown.'' --Sir W. Scott.

4. Covered with the eggs and larv[ae] of flies; fly blown.


Blown \Blown\, p. p. & a.
Opened; in blossom or having blossomed, as a flower. --Shak.

  1. Here's a bunch of turtles that were blown up when they removed the rigs."
  2. Clouds of black dust blown from freshly plowed fields created blackouts on highways in the northern part of the state, causing an 18-car pileup on U.S. Highway 31 outside South Bend.
  3. Nowadays, Morgenau sees the proliferation of spas as part of a burgeoning "stress industry." "The whole business is blown up way out of proportion.
  4. Metal scaffolding around a third plane, an A-300 airbus, was blown into the aircraft's skin.
  5. "I really thought I had blown it.
  6. They had to paddle 200 miles upstream on the Paraguay River in Brazil because high winds had blown water plants into a solid mass that blocked their path, and later spent 17 days without touching shore on the same river because of floods.
  7. Indeed, the only senator who brought abortion up directly was Packwood, who said the issue had been blown out of proportion and the HHS secretary really has little to do with substantive decisions on abortion.
  8. One black-and-white print ad featured a hip young man being almost blown away by the powerful sound of a stereo playing a Maxell audio tape.
  9. Hotels have repaired hurricane damage, palms sway and discos throb, but fine stretches of beach were blown away and the tourists, without whom Cancun has no purpose, are slow to return.
  10. Onyszkiewicz expressed wariness, but said that, "Our hopes are not quite blown yet." "It seem that the authorities would like to obtain our stamp (of approval) under decisions that have already been made.
  11. Pieces of furniture blown out of shelled apartments were scattered in the streets.
  12. "This is the most likely explanation for this completely unprecedented and grossly improper action of halting the examination that would have blown all of these thing so wide open," said Black, allawyer with the bank board.
  13. "He was working near the top of the tank and was blown off by the explosion," Warnke said. "It's possible that the explosion could have been related to his work, but we don't know yet.
  14. A round of applause to the NCAA for having blown the whistle.
  15. Nine passengers were blown out of the aircraft to their deaths.
  16. "I really think the press has blown it out of proportion," said 18-year-old Kelly Manion. "We'll get along together.
  17. Don't put your head up, because it will get blown off." "Federal employee whistle-blowers deserve better," Levin said.
  18. Radios Will Separate The Sound and the Fury HAVE YOU EVER started your car after your teen-ager drove it and nearly had your eardrums blown out by the radio?
  19. Air pressurized to 3,000 pounds per square inch can be blown into the breech to clear away debris to guard against a "blowback," which happens when powder ignites before the breech is closed.
  20. Farther west, the Wyoming Highway Patrol closed sections of I-80 and I-25 and some other highways because snow blown by 25 mph wind cut visibility nearly to zero.
  21. More than one receptionist has blown smoke in his face, he explains, while others engrossed in best sellers have thrown him a withering glance and barked, "Whaddyawan?"
  22. UN inspectors charged with ridding Iraq of its weapons of mass destruction have already destroyed about 8,000 unfilled chemical munitions and blown up leaking rockets containing 2.5 tonnes of nerve agents.
  23. As anyone can see who visits the place, it is essentially a decorated shed, blown up to mammoth size.
  24. These days, small and entrepreneurial food concerns trying to field new products and brands are being blown off the battlefield.
  25. "All the windows were blown out" in the house, Mrs. Bakke said, "and all my knick-knacks were broken." Most of the funnel clouds did not touch down.
  26. The paper said investigators think that once a hole was blown in the side of the jet and the electronics bay _ its nerve center _ destroyed, the air pressure at the high altitude literally ripped the jet apart.
  27. He's had his windows blown out as well.' Close to Joxor's is Windsor House, the tallest office block in Ireland and home to the Inland Revenue as well as the European Commission in Northern Ireland and numerous private offices.
  28. The mortgage debt that was always covered by the rise in house prices, even though part of it was blown in local showrooms.
  29. Moments later, Steurer recalled afterward, he was still sitting on his mattress _ outside on the driveway, blown out a side wall of his home by the force of the gas explosion.
  30. Sterling's fall could get out of hand, especially when policy is in the hands of a government blown this way and that by short-term policy considerations. Foreign currency borrowing would at least signal intent to intervene if necessary.
加入收藏 本地收藏 百度搜藏 QQ书签 美味书签 Google书签 Mister Wong
您正在访问的是
中国词汇量第二的英语词典
更多精彩,登录后发现......
验证码看不清,请点击刷新
  注册