BLOW vs SHOCK: NOUN
- An unexpected attack; an assault.
- An unexpected shock or calamity.
- A sudden hard stroke or hit, as with the fist or an object.
- The state of blossoming.
- A mass of blossoms.
- An unfortunate happening that hinders of impedes; something that is thwarting or frustrating
- A strong current of air
- An impact (as from a collision)
- An unpleasant or disappointing surprise
- Street names for cocaine
- A powerful stroke with the fist or a weapon
- Forceful exhalation through the nose or mouth
- A sudden agitation of the mind or feelings; a sensation of pleasure or pain caused by something unexpected or overpowering; also, a sudden agitating or overpowering event.
- A quivering or shaking which is the effect of a blow, collision, or violent impulse; a blow, impact, or collision; a concussion; a sudden violent impulse or onset.
- A lot consisting of sixty pieces; -- a term applied in some Baltic ports to loose goods.
- A pile or assemblage of sheaves of grain, as wheat, rye, or the like, set up in a field, the sheaves varying in number from twelve to sixteen; a stook.
- Synonyms and Stack, etc. See sheaf.
- A unit of tale, sixty boxes or canes, by a statute of Charles II.
- A similar group of stalks of Indian corn or maize, not made up in sheaves, but placed singly, and bound together at the top in a conical form. Such shocks are usually made by gathering a number of cut stalks around a center of standing corn.
- In agriculture, a group of sheaves of grain placed standing in a field with the stalk-ends down, and so arranged as to shed the rain as completely as possible, in order to permit the grain to dry and ripen before housing. In England also called shook or stook.
- A mirror of the poorest quality, made of ordinary window-glass.
- A thick, disordered mass (of hair).
- A dog with long rough hair; a kind of shaggy dog.
- Synonyms Shock, Collision, Concussion, Jolt. A shock is a violent shaking, and may be produced by a collision, a heavy jolt, or otherwise; it may be of the nature of a concussion. The word is more often used of the effect than of the action: as, the shock of battle, a shock of electricity, the shock from the sudden announcement of bad news. A collision is the dashing of a moving body upon a body moving or still: as, a railroad collision; collision of steamships. Concussion is a shaking together; hence the word is especially applicable where that which is shaken has, or may be thought of as having, parts: as, concussion of the air or of the brain. Collision implies the solidity of the colliding objects: as, the collision of two cannon-balls in the air. A jolt is a shaking by a single abrupt jerking motion upward or downward or both, as by a springless wagon on a rough road. Shock is used figuratively; we speak sometimes of the collision of ideas or of minds: concussion and jolt are only literal.
- A strong and sudden agitation of the mind or feelings; a startling surprise accompanied by grief, alarm, indignation, horror, relief, joy, or other strong emotion: as, a shock to the moral sense of a community.
- A sudden attack of paralysis; a stroke.
- Specifically
- Any sudden and more or less violent physical or mental impression.
- A violent collision; a concussion; a violent striking or dashing together or against, as of bodies; specifically, in seismology, an earthquake-shock (see earthquake).
- A thick heavy mass.
- A number of sheaves of grain stacked upright in a field for drying.
- A shock absorber.
- A sudden economic disturbance, such as a rise in the price of a commodity.
- The sensation and muscular spasm caused by an electric current passing through the body or a body part.
- A massive, acute physiological reaction usually to physical trauma, infection, or allergy, characterized by a marked loss of blood pressure, resulting in a diminished blood flow to body tissues and a rapid heart rate.
- A sudden feeling of distress.
- Something that suddenly causes emotional distress.
- A violent collision, impact, or explosion, or the force or movement resulting from this.
- A reflex response to the passage of electric current through the body
- The feeling of distress and disbelief that you have when something bad happens accidentally
- A mechanical damper; absorbs energy of sudden impulses
- (pathology) bodily collapse or near collapse caused by inadequate oxygen delivery to the cells; characterized by reduced cardiac output and rapid heartbeat and circulatory insufficiency and pallor
- A pile of sheaves of grain set on end in a field to dry; stalks of Indian corn set up in a field
- A bushy thick mass (especially hair)
- An instance of agitation of the earth's crust
- An unpleasant or disappointing surprise
- The violent interaction of individuals or groups entering into combat
BLOW vs SHOCK: VERB
- Show off
- Make a mess of, destroy or ruin
- Be in motion due to some air or water current
- Leave; informal or rude
- Melt, break, or become otherwise unusable
- Spend thoughtlessly; throw away
- Provide sexual gratification through oral stimulation
- Lay eggs
- Exhale hard
- Cause to be revealed and jeopardized
- Allow to regain its breath
- Shape by blowing
- Free of obstruction by blowing air through
- Burst suddenly
- Be blowing or storming
- Spend lavishly or wastefully on
- Sound by having air expelled through a tube
- Make a sound as if blown
- Play or sound a wind instrument
- Cause air to go in, on, or through
- Cause to move by means of an air current
- Spout moist air from the blowhole
- Inflict a trauma upon
- Strike with disgust or revulsion
- Surprise greatly; knock someone's socks off
- Strike with horror or terror
- Collide violently
- Collect or gather into shocks
- Subject to electrical shocks
BLOW vs SHOCK: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To cause (a covert intelligence operation or operative) to be revealed and thereby jeopardized.
- To spoil or lose through ineptitude: : botch.
- To spend money freely on; treat.
- To spend (money) freely and rashly. : waste.
- To cause (a fuse) to melt or become disabled.
- To cause to fail or break down, as by operating at extreme or improper conditions.
- To lay or deposit eggs in. Used of certain insects.
- To demolish by the force of an explosion.
- To allow (a winded horse) to regain its breath.
- To cause to be out of breath.
- To sound.
- To cause (a wind instrument) to sound.
- To cause air or gas to be expelled suddenly from.
- To expel (air) from the mouth.
- To shape or form (glass, for example) by forcing air or gas through at the end of a pipe.
- To clear out or make free of obstruction by forcing air through.
- To drive a current of air on, in, or through.
- To cause to move by means of a current of air.
- To be disgustingly disagreeable or offensive.
- To boast.
- To go away; depart.
- To move very fast in relation to something.
- To melt or otherwise become disabled. Used of a fuse.
- To fail or break down, as from being operated under extreme or improper conditions.
- To spout moist air from the blowhole. Used of a whale.
- To release air or gas suddenly; burst or explode.
- To breathe hard; pant.
- To produce a sound by expelling a current of air, as in sounding a wind instrument or a whistle.
- To expel a current of air, as from the mouth or from a bellows.
- To move with or have strong winds.
- To move along or be carried by the wind.
- To be in a state of motion. Used of the air or of wind.
- To be occupied with making shocks.
- To come into contact violently, as in battle; collide.
- To administer electroconvulsive therapy to (a patient).
- To administer electric current to (a patient) to treat cardiac arrest or life-threatening arrhythmias.
- To subject (an animal or person) to an electric shock.
- To induce a state of physical shock in (an animal or person).
- To surprise and disturb greatly.
BLOW vs SHOCK: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To subject to the action of an electrical discharge so as to cause a more or less violent depression or commotion of the nervous system.
- To strike with surprise, terror, horror, or disgust; to cause to recoil.
- To give a shock to; to cause to shake or waver; hence, to strike against suddenly; to encounter with violence.
- To collect, or make up, into a shock or shocks; to stook.
- To gather (grain) into shocks.
BLOW vs SHOCK: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Be inadequate or objectionable
- Deposit eggs (of insects)
- Informal or rude
- Leave
- Throw away
- Spend thoughtlessly
- (intransitive; transitive verb) To bloom or cause to bloom.
- Knock someone's socks off
- Surprise greatly
- Absorbs energy of sudden impulses
- A mechanical damper
- A sudden jarring impact
- Shaggy.
- A dialectal variant of shuck.
- To gather sheaves in piles or shocks.
- To make up into shocks or stooks: as, to shock corn.
- To butt, as rams.
- To rush violently.
- To collide with violence; meet in sudden onset or encounter.
- = Syn. 2. To appal, dismay, sicken, nauseate, scandalize, revolt, outrage, astound. See shock, n.
- To strike as with indignation, horror, or disgust; cause to recoil, as from something astounding, appalling, hateful, or horrible; offend extremely; stagger; stun.
- To strike against suddenly and violently; encounter with sudden collision or brunt; specifically, to encounter in battle: in this sense, archaic.
BLOW vs SHOCK: RELATED WORDS
- Bungle, Drift, Flub, Bollix, Mishandle, Squander, Blunder, Botch, Spoil, Gust, Blast, Bump, Puff, Shock, Setback
- Floor, Scandalize, Traumatize, Concussion, Offend, Shock absorber, Cushion, Impact, Stupor, Appall, Daze, Appal, Outrage, Blow, Stun
BLOW vs SHOCK: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Bungle, Drift, Flub, Bollix, Mishandle, Squander, Blunder, Botch, Spoil, Gust, Blast, Bump, Puff, Shock, Setback
- Surprise, Take aback, Electric shock, Floor, Concussion, Offend, Shock absorber, Cushion, Impact, Stupor, Daze, Appal, Outrage, Blow, Stun
BLOW vs SHOCK: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Remove these components and blow out with air.
- House number three is make from bricks and he cannot blow it down, so he returns with dynamite, intending to blow it up.
- Similarly the green blow fly, illustris, corpses located in open, brightly lit habitats whereas the black blow fly, regina, shaded localities.
- Today, Union Products blow molds are highly collectible as are blow molds from other companies.
- But as blow after blow is delivered, this lethargy passes off, and the replies become stronger and stronger.
- May the wind blow much happiness into your life on your birthday and also help you blow out all those candles.
- Eroge will blow you away or blow your mind but most of the elements of its construction are satisfactorily above average.
- English expression for blow for blow, which also meant a trade of verbal insults.
- England made a brilliant start by scoring their first five penalties, but once again Germany matched them blow for blow.
- Voices or Bells Piano F Blow, winds, blow, winds, blow, winds, blow.
- Some studies have shown that during this initial shock phase, the shock gives us a level of anesthesia to help cope with the pain.
- Multinational companies faced an initial supply shock, then a demand shock as more and more countries ordered people to stay at home.
- Remove the top nut on the shock that holds the shock and spring together.
- Opposition DD Shock Troopers: The guards stunk, so now the Shock Troops have taken over the building.
- Tips for When the Shock Kicks A common complaint regarding the shock has to do with kicking, especially under braking.
- The wooden handle works together with shock absorbing hand glue that works to minimize shock and vibration stings.
- Shock can be life threatening, but, I mean, you break your leg, you go into shock.
- Selain itu, masbro bisa menggantu suspensi belakangnya dengan shock tabung, seperti buatan Ohlins ataupun shock YSS.
- Shock Dissipative Function allows your device to withstand extreme shock and pressure.
- Remember to hold shock button until sync shock delivered.
BLOW vs SHOCK: QUESTIONS
- What causes melt instability in blow molding machines?
- Apakah semua orang bisa melakukan Blow rambut permanen?
- How does Regency plastics develop blow molding products?
- Do expandable garden hoses blow out water pressure?
- Did Kurtis Blow have a successful heart transplant?
- Did Indonesia blow up illegal foreign fishing boats?
- Will the deathbringing breath of Zephyros blow again?
- Why choose blow La La full service salon&Blow Dry Bar?
- Can All polyolefin blow molding resins be injection blow molded?
- Why does the song blow bugle blow use alliteration?
- How do you shock a pool with dissolved granular shock?
- Is Milton Friedman's'shock doctrine'really about'shock treatment'?
- Will the Casio G-Shock gbd-h1000 be shock resistant?
- Is it harder to manage inbound shock or outbound shock?
- How is an electrical shock different from a medical shock?
- How is neurogenic shock differentiated from other forms of shock?
- Should I get the monarch shock or Suntour Radion shock?
- Did Benetton shock the world with shock advertising?
- Why are shock absorbers called shock dampers for buildings?
- What is maintenance shock therapy for acute shock syndrome ( shock)?