I wasn't frightened by what he said it was just bluster. 他说的话吓不倒我--不过是雷声大,雨点小。
blustering
[ adj ] blowing in violent and abrupt bursts <adj.all> blustering (or blusterous) winds of Patagoniaa cold blustery day a gusty storm with strong sudden rushes of wind
Bluster \Blus"ter\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Blustered}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Blustering}.] [Allied to blast.] 1. To blow fitfully with violence and noise, as wind; to be windy and boisterous, as the weather.
And ever-threatening storms Of Chaos blustering round. --Milton.
2. To talk with noisy violence; to swagger, as a turbulent or boasting person; to act in a noisy, tumultuous way; to play the bully; to storm; to rage.
Your ministerial directors blustered like tragic tyrants. --Burke.
Blustering \Blus"ter*ing\, a. 1. Exhibiting noisy violence, as the wind; stormy; tumultuous.
"He that sitteth in the heavens shall laugh," he frequently said, quoting a Psalm about God's laughter at humanity's blustering presumptions of absolute solutions.
Israel's main spokesman, Benjamin Netanyahu, appeared unable to adjust to this new tone and was left blustering about Mr. Arafat and the PLO rather than addressing the new content of the Palestinians' message.
He worships Joe, a blustering lout who likes to beat up on his woman Sandy, especially when he's drunk, and that seems to turn her on more than anything else.
Kevin Conway works hard to overcome this problem, blustering here, whimpering there, practically crumpling under the weight of the onerous crown.
The only possible one,' he said. General Ratko Mladic, the Bosnian Serb commander, in a blustering and angry briefing to the deputies dismissed as biased the proposed maps, which he said would 'bring horrible consequences'.