[
UK
/blˈəʊɐ/
]
[ US /ˈbɫoʊɝ/ ]
[ US /ˈbɫoʊɝ/ ]
NOUN
- large aquatic carnivorous mammal with fin-like forelimbs no hind limbs, including: whales; dolphins; porpoises; narwhals
- a fan run by an electric motor
- a device that produces a current of air
How To Use blower In A Sentence
- Tayside Police admit the whistle-blower's inside knowledge shows he has to be a high-ranking officer - at least an inspector and probably a superintendent.
- The Choctaw [Footnote: Romans, p. 70, Bossu, Vol. I, p. 308.] boys made use of a cane stalk, eight or nine feet in length, from which the obstructions at the joints had been removed, much as boys use what is called a putty blower. Indian Games : an historical research
- Never mind York's links with Europe, the city's business people spend more time gabbing on the blower to Americans than they do to French or Germans.
- We had a chat on the blower and were both satisfied with my withdrawal of the comment and my public apology.
- A whistle-blower's e-mail from someone at the authors' institution indicated that data in the study were fabricated.
- He said a garden blower was stolen and a pair of denim pants were taken from the clothes line in the backyard.
- Large plastic pipes run from the outlet of the four blowers to airtight holes drilled in the platform.
- Mrs. Blower, knows how to bring down that robust health, which is a very alarming state of the frame when it is considered secundum artem. Saint Ronan's Well
- If th 'Prisidint iv th' Epworth League was a safe-blower be night th 'man that'd catch him'd be a la-ad with gr-reat powers iv observation an' thrained habits iv raisonin '. Observations By Mr. Dooley
- Rather than rewarding whistleblowers who had been punished for their good deeds, Obama has signing statemented away constraints on his power to retaliate against whistleblowers by firing them. Six Months of Immunity