Dictionary Workbench Ondict

blow up

Dictionary entry view. Switch to definition mode above when you know the meaning but not the word.

blow up

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++朗文当代英语 5++LDOCE 5++朗文 5++→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
blow upSome problem had blown up and the Prime Minister wanted to see me.We also used it to blow up bunkers and similar things.He blew up five city blocks, of course.A brisk wind was blowing up from the Tail of the Bank.And when that song blew up, I was shocked.A bomb blew up near his truck.The gunners had to blow up some of their own artillery pieces to keep them from being turned on themselves.At 0400 she blew up with the loss of fifty-seven of the precious tanks and ten of the even more precious Hurricanes.blow up ... balloonBut there are two ways of blowing up a balloon.There was a game where you blew up balloons and sat on them.Work quickly or keep the cutting material in a plastic bag blown up like a balloon and sealed.Tell the students to blow up the balloon and then tape the straw to the balloon.You look like you have blown up like a balloon and you feel that you are a complete dieting failure.blow atBoth cars blew up at Aintree, but the start money saw us through.Privately, Diamandopoulos, as mercurial as he is erudite, is said to have blown up at critics.She simply blew up at him.Well, she blew up at me last Saturday for no reason.blow up in somebody’s faceIt was kind of funny watching the presentation blow up in Harry's face.Kristin knew that if anyone found out, the whole thing could blow up in her face.But I also fear that this encryption stuff is so powerful it could blow up in my face.Having opted for a formation that he thought would beat Leicester, David O Leary saw it blow up in his face.Liable blow up in their faces.Not only could be, but would be, and the whole thing would blow up in my face.Nothing of its kind had ever been done before, and it could have blown up in his face.When the clothes iron blows up in your face.Auditors some-times miss big potential problems that blow up in the face of bondholders.
Related topics: Photography
ˈblow-up noun  1. [countable]TCP a photograph, or part of a photograph, that has been made larger 放大的照片2. [countable usually singular] American EnglishANGRY a sudden big argument or disagreement 突然的大吵 blow up at blow1
Examples from the Corpus
blow-upMr O'Sullivan filled an enormous cavity completely painlessly, while a video screen showed a blow-up of the tooth being worked on.It is possible to find safe harbor but nearly impossible to do so without a few blow-ups.Few of us are comfortable with confrontations because they frequently lead to full-fledged blow-ups.Walls are covered with grainy blow-ups of sleek-jawed Latin athletes.Kirov had used his services before, to produce false papers, touch up prints or produce blow-ups from microfilm.It was a job of the utmost precision, and even a large-scale blow-up might not reveal that it was not genuine.But a day after the blow-up, the committee assigned to seek a compromise won a three-month reprieve.
ˈblow-up nounChineseSyllable
a been a photograph, Corpus that of part or photograph, has


blow up

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++朗文当代英语 5++LDOCE 5++朗文 5++blow up  blow up at blow1(PHRASAL VERB)


blow up
blow up phrasal verb (see also blow)
1. to destroy something, or to be destroyed, by an explosion:
    The plane blew up in midair.
    blow something ↔ up
    Rebels attempted to blow up the bridge.
2. blow something ↔ up to fill something with air or gas:
    Can you blow up this balloon?
    We’ll blow the tyres up.
3. if a situation, argument etc blows up, it suddenly becomes important or dangerous:
    A crisis had blown up over the peace talks.
4. blow something ↔ up if you blow up a photograph, you make it larger
   SYN  enlarge
5. informal to become very angry with someone:
    Jenny’s father blew up when she didn’t come home last night.
    blow up at
    I was surprised at the way he blew up at Hardy.
6. if bad weather blows up, it suddenly arrives:
    It looks as if there’s a storm blowing up.
7. blow up in sb’s face if something you have done or planned to do blows up in your face, it suddenly goes wrong:
    One of his deals had just blown up in his face.


ˌblow ˈup🔑 to explode; to be destroyed by an explosion 爆炸;被炸毁The bomb blew up. 炸弹爆炸了。🔊🔊A police officer was killed when his car blew up. 一名警察在其汽车爆炸时遇难。🔊<titled status="1" tranid="32">explode</titled>blow upgo offbursteruptdetonate

These are all words that can be used when sth bursts apart violently, causing damage or injury. 以上各词均可表示爆炸、爆破、爆裂。

  • explode to burst loudly and violently, causing damage; to make sth burst in this way 指爆炸、爆破、爆裂、引爆The jet smashed into a hillside and exploded. 喷气式飞机撞上山坡爆炸了。The bomb was exploded under controlled conditions. 对炸弹实施了可控引爆。
  • blow (sth) up to be destroyed by an explosion; to destroy sth by an explosion 指爆炸、(被)炸毁A police officer was killed when his car blew up. 一名警员在其汽车爆炸时遇难。
  • go off (of a bomb) to explode; (of a gun) to be fired 指(炸弹)爆炸、(枪)开火The bomb went off in a crowded street. 炸弹在挤满人的大街上爆炸了。 NOTE When used about guns, the choice of go off (instead of 'be fired') can suggest that the gun was fired by accident. 用 go off(而非 be fired)可指枪支走火。
  • burst to break open or apart, especially because of pressure from inside; to make sth break in this way 指(使)爆裂、胀开That balloon's going to burst. 那气球马上要爆了。
  • erupt (of a volcano) to throw out burning rocks and smoke; (of burning rocks and smoke) to be thrown out of a volcano 指(火山)爆发、(岩浆、烟)喷出
  • detonate (rather formal) (of a bomb) to explode; to make a bomb explode 指(炸弹)爆炸、使(炸弹)爆炸、引爆、起爆Two other bombs failed to detonate. 另外两枚炸弹没有爆炸。

Patterns

  • a bomb explodes/blows up/goes off/bursts/detonates
  • a car/plane/vehicle explodes/blows up
  • a firework/rocket explodes/goes off
to start suddenly and with force 爆发A storm was blowing up. 暴风雨大作。🔊A crisis has blown up over the President's latest speech. 总统最近的讲话引发了一场危机。🔊
See also blow