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单词 blast
释义

blast

noun
 
/blɑːst/
/blæst/
Idioms
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    explosion

  1.  
    [countable] an explosion or a powerful movement of air caused by an explosion
    • a bomb blast
    • 27 schoolchildren were injured in the blast.
    • The blast ripped through the building.
    Topics War and conflictc1
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective
    • huge
    • loud
    • massive
    verb + blast
    • survive
    • cause
    blast + verb
    • hit something
    • rip through something
    • rock something
    preposition
    • in a/​the blast
    See full entry
  2. of air

  3.  
    [countable] a sudden strong movement of air
    • A blast of hot air hit us as we stepped off the plane.
    • the wind’s icy blasts
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective
    • hot
    • icy
    preposition
    • blast of
    See full entry
  4. loud noise

  5.  
    [countable] a sudden loud noise, especially one made by a musical instrument that you blow, or by a whistle or a car horn
    • three short blasts on the ship’s siren
    • The driver opened the door letting out a blast of Bob Marley.
    • He gave a short blast on his trumpet.
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective
    • hot
    • icy
    preposition
    • blast of
    See full entry
  6. criticism

  7. [countable] (used especially in newspapers) strong criticism
    • Blast for prison governors in judge’s report.
  8. fun

  9. [singular] (informal) a very happy experience that is a lot of fun
    • The party was a blast.
    • We had a blast at the party.
  10. email

  11. [countable] (North American English, informal) a piece of advertising or information that is sent to a large number of people at the same time by email
    • They sent out email blasts and posted information on all their websites.
  12. Word OriginOld English blǣst, of Germanic origin; related to blaze ‘present news in a sensational manner’.
Idioms
a blast from the past
  1. (informal) a person or thing from your past that you see, hear, meet, etc. again in the present
(at) full blast
  1. with the greatest possible volume or power
    • She had the car stereo on at full blast.

blast

verb
 
/blɑːst/
/blæst/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they blast
/blɑːst/
/blæst/
he / she / it blasts
/blɑːsts/
/blæsts/
past simple blasted
/ˈblɑːstɪd/
/ˈblæstɪd/
past participle blasted
/ˈblɑːstɪd/
/ˈblæstɪd/
-ing form blasting
/ˈblɑːstɪŋ/
/ˈblæstɪŋ/
Phrasal Verbs
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    explode

  1.  
    [transitive, intransitive] blast (something) (+ adv./prep.) to violently destroy or break something into pieces, using explosives
    • They blasted a huge crater in the runway.
    • They had to blast a tunnel through the mountain.
    • All the windows were blasted inwards with the force of the explosion.
    • The jumbo jet was blasted out of the sky.
    • Danger! Blasting in Progress!
    Topics War and conflictc1
  2. make loud noise

  3.  
    [intransitive, transitive] to make a loud unpleasant noise, especially music
    • blast (out) Music suddenly blasted out from the speakers.
    • blast something (out) The radio blasted out rock music at full volume.
  4. criticize

  5. [transitive] blast somebody/something (for something/for doing something) (informal) to criticize somebody/something severely
    • The movie was blasted by all the critics.
  6. hit/kick/shoot

  7. [transitive] blast somebody/something (+ adv./prep.) (informal) to hit, kick or shoot somebody/something with a lot of force
    • He blasted the ball past the goalie.
    • He blasted (= shot) the policeman right between the eyes.
  8. air/water

  9. [transitive] blast somebody/something (+ adv./prep.) to direct air, water, etc. at somebody/something with a lot of force
    • Police blasted the demonstrators with water cannons.
  10. destroy with disease, etc.

  11. [transitive, usually passive] blast something to destroy something such as a plant with disease, cold, heat, etc.
    • Their whole crop had been blasted by a late frost.
  12. Word OriginOld English blǣst, of Germanic origin; related to blaze ‘present news in a sensational manner’.

blast

exclamation
/blɑːst/
/blæst/
(especially British English, informal)
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  1. people sometimes say Blast! when they are annoyed about something
    • Oh blast! The car won't start.
    Word OriginOld English blǣst, of Germanic origin; related to blaze ‘present news in a sensational manner’.
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更新时间:2025/2/5 4:09:48