blow·hard

  • 1blow-hard — blow′ hard n. sts a boastful and talkative person • Etymology: 1850–55, amer …

    From formal English to slang

  • 2blow|hard — «BLOH HAHRD», noun, adjective. Slang. –n. a noisy boaster; braggart. –adj. noisily bragging:…a blowhard rookie (Time) …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 3blow-hard — /bloh hahrd /, n. Slang. an exceptionally boastful and talkative person. [1850 55, Amer.] * * * …

    Universalium

  • 4blow-hard — noun (C) AmE informal someone who talks about themselves too much …

    Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • 5blow-hard — /bloh hahrd /, n. Slang. an exceptionally boastful and talkative person. [1850 55, Amer.] …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 6blow·hard — /ˈbloʊˌhɑɚd/ noun, pl hards [count] US informal + disapproving : a person who talks too much and who has strong opinions that other people dislike She s nice but her husband s a real blowhard. [=windbag] …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 7blow — I n. 1) to deal, deliver, strike a blow (he dealt us a severe blow) 2) to heap, rain blows on smb. 3) to come to blows; to exchange blows 4) to take a blow (the boxer took several blows to the head) 5) to cushion; deflect, parry, ward off; dodge… …

    Combinatory dictionary

  • 8blow — There are three distinct blows in English. The commonest, the verb ‘send out air’ [OE], can be traced back to an Indo European base *bhlā . It came into English (as Old English blāwan) via Germanic *blǣ , source also of bladder. The Indo European …

    The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • 9blow — There are three distinct blows in English. The commonest, the verb ‘send out air’ [OE], can be traced back to an Indo European base *bhlā . It came into English (as Old English blāwan) via Germanic *blǣ , source also of bladder. The Indo European …

    Word origins

  • 10Blow Up Your Video — Studioalbum von Veröffentlichung 18. Januar 1988 …

    Deutsch Wikipedia