n.
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- A very strong gust of wind or air.
- The effect of such a gust.
- A forcible stream of air, gas, or steam from an opening, especially one in a blast furnace to aid combustion.
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- A sudden loud sound, especially one produced by a stream of forced air: a piercing blast from the steam whistle.
- The act of producing such a sound: gave a blast on his trumpet.
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- A violent explosion, as of dynamite or a bomb.
- The violent effect of such an explosion, consisting of a wave of increased atmospheric pressure followed immediately by a wave of decreased pressure.
- An explosive charge.
- Botany. Any of several plant diseases of diverse causes, resulting in sudden death of buds, flowers, foliage, or young fruits.
- A destructive or damaging influence.
- A powerful hit, blow, or shot.
- A violent verbal assault or outburst: The candidate leveled a blast at her opponent.
- Slang. A highly exciting or pleasurable experience or event, such as a big party.
v. blast·ed, blast·ing, blasts
v. tr.
- To knock down or shatter by or as if by explosion; smash.
- To play or sound loudly: The referees blasted their whistles.
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- To hit with great force: The batter blasted the ball to right field.
- To kill or destroy by hitting or shooting.
- To have a harmful or destructive effect on.
- To cause to shrivel, wither, or mature imperfectly by or as if by blast or blight: crops that were blasted by frost.
- To make or open by or as if by explosion: blast a tunnel through the mountains.
- To criticize or attack vigorously.
v. intr.
- To use or detonate explosives.
- To emit a loud, intense sound; blare: speakers blasting at full volume.
- To wither or shrivel or mature imperfectly.
- To criticize or attack with vigor.
- To shoot.
- Electronics. To distort sound recording or transmission by overloading a microphone or loudspeaker.
Phrasal Verb:
blast off
- To take off, as a rocket.
Idiom:
full blast
- At full speed, volume, or capacity: turned the radio up full blast.
blast
n 1: a long and hard-hit fly ball
2: a sudden very loud noise [syn: bang, clap, eruption, loud noise]
3: a strong current of air; "the tree was bent almost double by the gust" [syn: gust, blow]
4: an explosion (as of dynamite)
5: a highly pleasurable or exciting experience; "we had a good time at the party"; "celebrating after the game was a blast" [syn: good time]
6: intense adverse criticism; "Clinton directed his fire at the Republican Party"; "the government has come under attack"; "don't give me any flak" [syn: fire, attack, flak, flack]
v 1: make a strident sound; "She tended to blast when speaking into a microphone" [syn: blare]
2: hit hard; "He smashed a 3-run homer" [syn: smash, nail, boom]
3: use explosives on; "The enemy has been shelling us all day" [syn: shell]
cf. gust
n : a strong current of air; "the tree was bent almost double by the gust" [syn: blast, blow]
첫댓글 blast 돌풍 (증오 등의)폭발 비난