bloviate
— Verb
– English
~ orate verbosely and windily
blow
— Verb
– English
~ cause air to go in, on, or through; "Blow my hair dry"
blow
— Verb
– English
~ leave; informal or rude; "shove off!"; "The children shoved along"; "Blow now!"; "let's blow this place"
blow
— Verb
– English
~ play or sound a wind instrument; "She blew the horn"
blow
— Verb
– English
~ shape by blowing; "Blow a glass vase"
blow
— Verb
– English
~ exhale hard; "blow on the soup to cool it down"
blow
— Verb
– English
~ make a mess of, destroy or ruin; "I botched the dinner and we had to eat out"; "the pianist screwed up the difficult passage in the second movement"
blow
— Verb
– English
~ spend thoughtlessly; throw away; "He wasted his inheritance on his insincere friends"; "You squandered the opportunity to get and advanced degree"
blow
— Verb
– English
~ be in motion due to some air or water current; "The leaves were blowing in the wind"; "the boat drifted on the lake"; "The sailboat was adrift on the open sea"; "the shipwrecked boat drifted away from the shore"
blow
— Verb
– English
~ free of obstruction by blowing air through; "blow one's nose"
blow
— Verb
– English
~ cause to move by means of an air current; "The wind blew the leaves around in the yard"
blow
— Verb
– English
~ spend lavishly or wastefully on; "He blew a lot of money on his new home theater"
blow
— Verb
– English
~ be inadequate or objectionable; "this sucks!"; "this blows!"
blow
— Verb
– English
~ sound by having air expelled through a tube; "The trumpets blew"
blow
— Verb
– English
~ make a sound as if blown; "The whistle blew"
blow
— Verb
– English
~ provide sexual gratification through oral stimulation
blow
— Verb
– English
~ spout moist air from the blowhole; "The whales blew"
blow
— Verb
– English
~ be blowing or storming; "The wind blew from the West"