How To Use Bluster In A Sentence

  • Some random bluster and name-drop: "In 2005, we sponsored Rock the Vote, [garbled, something about wine], we got a chance to connect with President Obama then. "I want to see that invitation": D.C. 'Housewives' recap and fact-check (#8, Oct. 1)
  • Truly a blusterous day.
  • He blustered and bullyragged; he had been their boss and he had been fired without cause, he insisted. Joan of Arc of the North Woods
  • This is the most substantive passage in a speech which otherwise is tied together by bluster. Times, Sunday Times
  • Beyond, the Pacific, dim and vast, was raising on its sky-line tumbled cloud-masses that swept landward, giving warning of the first blustering breath of winter. Chapter 21
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  • The rest of the speech consisted largely of jingoistic bluster and attempts at political intimidation.
  • We met at Prefab, on a cold, blusterous winter's day, over steaming bowls of excellent chowder and chunks of crusty bread.
  • Bravado, bluster, and empty threats were, after all, only useful to a certain degree.
  • Some comprimario and secondo roles were doubled up: Vladimir Hristov was both a George Clooney-suave Marchese d'Obigny and a bland Dr. Grenvil; Giorgio Dinev, previously seen enjoyably blustering as Tosca's Spoletta, doddered formulaically as Violetta's servant, but had mischevious sparkle as Gastone — having introduced his friend Alfredo to Violetta, he worked the room, pointing out his handiwork to the other guests, a proud yenta. Pretty Woman
  • Some comprimario and secondo roles were doubled up: Vladimir Hristov was both a George Clooney-suave Marchese d'Obigny and a bland Dr. Grenvil; Giorgio Dinev, previously seen enjoyably blustering as Tosca's Spoletta, doddered formulaically as Violetta's servant, but had mischevious sparkle as Gastone — having introduced his friend Alfredo to Violetta, he worked the room, pointing out his handiwork to the other guests, a proud yenta. Archive 2008-03-01
  • When the blustering wind and swirling snow make sledding and building snowmen feel like work, ditch your icy mittens and spend the afternoon by a warm stove, sipping hot chocolate and munching on cookies.
  • The flames blustered
  • There was more bombast and bluster than football, the most notable happenings on the park being the accumulation of bookings.
  • The characters go beyond bluster as they talk, in pairs, while on leave before battle. Times, Sunday Times
  • He offered his arm to her, and the four of them swept out of the door into the blustery weather.
  • USA should restore ties, and try to address the moderates in Iran without assuming the civilisationally-superior tone of hectoring or blustering. proudlyleft New Statesman
  • So this year, consider creating an interior file in your soul called Pajama Day, and when things get crazed, out of nowhere, declare a blustery March Saturday Pajama Day, or a blistery August Sunday Pajama Day or any blessed day you feel like stopping and hanging out in your own holy wholeness. Dr. Susan Corso: Pajama Days: Holiness For The Rest Of The Year
  • They are full of the glitter and bluster of German militarism ?mailed fist and shining armour.
  • It is hard to read the auguries, so complex is this interplay of deception, self-deception, bluster and bluff.
  • Kurosawa initiated his best work in 1948 with Drunken Angel , in which he teamed Takashi Shimura ( as a blustery alcoholic doctor ) and a young Toshiro Mifune ( as a hotheaded gangster ) .
  • ‘Aweel, ’ said the postilion, ‘it might be sae—I canna say against it, for I was not in the country at the time; but John Wilson was a blustering kind of chield, without the heart of a sprug. Chapter XI
  • Although he blustered about a ‘show trial’ and a ‘kangaroo court’, he was devastated to be thrown out of the party.
  • In June, the blustery, flustery Lewis Black published his non-apologia, Me of Little Faith; a couple of weeks later, the death of George Carlin reminded everybody what a cranky old infidel he was. An Atheist Walks Into a Bar …
  • Fur stroked against his nose as several other dogs joined them behind the sled, the only thing that protected them from the blustering wind.
  • It takes a huge amount of blustering and a large measure of deafness to defend the sales of British gold.
  • As the match began the blustery wind freshened and cooled with the huge Hawks flag fluttering above the old pavilion.
  • The mod blustered for a bit, trying to discount Sterling's objection - which Sterling stated very calmly, despite her anger. Tew's Day!
  • For all their bluster and bombast, each display of physical power proves in the end to be ineffectual.
  • His promise to the commissioner of more to come is not just a journalist's vainglorious bluster.
  • It reminded us that, for all the California-Wired-Hollywood bluster, cyberpunk was essentially a British invention, synthesized first through fictions and sonics then theory.
  • The rain blusters under the roof and I think I feel the bridge collapsing under me.
  • Burying it all under a thick shell of bluster, bullying, slavish adherence to protocol and discipline.
  • The ‘all options’ caveat refers to action short of war, if it isn't in fact merely bluster, which I think more likely.
  • Recall his blustering campaign rhetoric about defeating the Taliban; recall the public commitment last Obama Never Considered Diplomacy In Afghanistan
  • And it can win friends and influence people, at home and overseas, in a way that a show of force or diplomatic bluster might not. Times, Sunday Times
  • Many people will bluster aggressively when confronted, and then quietly stop doing what's been bugging you. The Guide to Greatness in Sales
  • The wind is blustering through the trees outside, and every so often assails the outside walls of my house as if testing their fortitude.
  • Given in his oscillations of mood to a lugubrious woebegoneness ” "He could be just the saddest-looking thing," remembers Roger Wilkins, one of his administration deputies ” Johnson while president brooded ponderously over how he was discounted by the intellectual left as a blustering boor. The Big Guy
  • You could tell that under all that bigmouthed bluster there was something darker going on. The Bloomsday Dead
  • It has been a cold, windy, blustery, blizzardy Christmas. Blizzards and peppermint candy canes....
  • If your child is blusterous collywobbles or headache, but do not have any explicit symptoms again, so he may be mental insecurity.
  • In both cases, when the going got tough, the blusterers got out.
  • It was thought," says Nashe, in his Quaternio, "a kind of solecism, and to savour of effeminacy, for a young gentleman in the flourishing time of his age to creep into a coach, and to shroud himself from wind and weather: our great delight was to out-brave the blustering boreas upon a great horse; to arm and prepare ourselves to go with Mars and Bellona into the field was our sport and pastime; coaches and caroches we left unto them for whom they were first invented, for ladies and gentlemen, and decrepit age and impotent people. Bracebridge Hall
  • Yesterday was not a blustery day. Times, Sunday Times
  • A blustery wind may help in dispersing the pollen, but it will also carry it further.
  • See how they bluster, or say the wrong thing, or just look embarrassed. Banish Anxiety - how to stop worrying and take charge of your life
  • ‘Yeah, but, there's not much work out there for people in your field at the moment, something might come along next week that would be great for you and you'd miss out,’ he blusters.
  • Once you waddle into those snow pants and head out into that blustery winter weather, you are rolling the dice with your life.
  • The unpredictable Missouri weather lived up to its formidable reputation as it blustered all week.
  • Falstaff was big and fantastically blustery, and in that context, we somehow managed to avoid discussing the politics of the day, enjoying a jolly frivolous evening in all.
  • The wintry weather took on freakish proportions with torrential rain turning to sideways sleet as the blustery wind continued to create havoc.
  • Residents said they dismissed the crowing as bluster, but noticed a dramatic change in his life in ensuing weeks.
  • I'm looking about the country-side and I see but a horde of lameter privatemen and half-pay officers maimed in limb or mind sitting about the dram bottle, hoved up with their vain-glory, blustering and blowing, instead of being honest, eident lairds and farmers. Gilian The Dreamer His Fancy, His Love and Adventure
  • He had certainly done his best to conceal it with his bluster and bravado and big bad persona.
  • Courtyard rooms face "inwards" - a quiet winter choice away from blustery winds. Telegraph.co.uk: news, business, sport, the Daily Telegraph newspaper, Sunday Telegraph
  • High winds and blustery showers persisted throughout the morning and afternoon which made things very difficult for the young competitors.
  • The honored role here in averting rhetorical disaster was assumed by Donald Rumsfeld, who expressed alarm at this overreach, and by Karen Hughes, who often checked our more blustery outbursts. Present at the Creation
  • He failed to find a suitable simile, and his attempt to bluster petered out. A MATTER OF CONSCIENCE
  • On this December afternoon, the wind was downright blustery and the temperature was frigid.
  • My own view would be to let him bluster, let him rant and rave all he wants, and let that be a matter between he and his own country.
  • Meteorology and topography conspire to paint blusterous murals and apocalyptic tableaux.
  • They spluttered and struggled for attacking fluency but dug in and showed determination on a cold and blustery afternoon when the result mattered more than their performance. Times, Sunday Times
  • All the Republicans’ talk and bluster is meaningless so long as the bill passes. Matthew Yglesias » Deep Breaths
  • They could shift product at prices that barely cover costs while blustering their way through the protests and anti-dumping litigation. Times, Sunday Times
  • He captures the flicker of self-doubt beneath the bluster and swagger. Times, Sunday Times
  • Not just one type either - we're getting snow, hail, rain, sunshine, blustery gales in the morning then calm afternoons.
  • I keep a firm grip on my hat and stare into the blustery abyss.
  • When isobars on a weather chart are close together, it will be a blustery day…
  • Swagger and arrogance is all very well but until that huge European Cup is hoisted aloft it is merely bluster and bravado.
  • I bet if I excused myself to go to the bathroom, he would still be blustering when I got back.
  • And it can win friends and influence people, at home and overseas, in a way that a show of force or diplomatic bluster might not. Times, Sunday Times
  • On the pulse Mr Prescott, I think not; it's the usual bluff and bluster from a man who might actually be less intelligent than he seems. Bluster and bluff from John Prescott
  • The Australians were way short of beating their own new world record, but the weather was a little cooler and the wind a little more blustery.
  • They blustered about how they would beat us all up.
  • He captures the flicker of self-doubt beneath the bluster and swagger. Times, Sunday Times
  • The characters go beyond bluster as they talk, in pairs, while on leave before battle. Times, Sunday Times
  • But Syjuco is only in his mid-30s, and he already possesses the wand of the enchanter, conjuring up striking scenes like this one: After buying a tiger for a pet, Salvador's blustering father decides to hand-feed the wretched animal some bacon. 'Ilustrado' by Miguel Syjuco, reviewed by Michael Dirda
  • When governments bluster, then citizens grow powerful.
  • Underneath all the bluster and talk of benefits, what they really want is to pay their way. Times, Sunday Times
  • The characters go beyond bluster as they talk, in pairs, while on leave before battle. Times, Sunday Times
  • A pair of late birdies gave Tom Watson a one-shot lead Saturday after three rounds of the British Open in blustery conditions at Turnberry .... Golf News: Stories, and Upcoming Event Coverage
  • And it can win friends and influence people, at home and overseas, in a way that a show of force or diplomatic bluster might not. Times, Sunday Times
  • He wavered and doubted, and to his confidants, with whom he could bluster and talk big, he expressed in no measured terms his detestation of Liberal principles, and especially of Catholic Emancipation. The Greville Memoirs A Journal of the Reigns of King George IV and King William IV, Volume 1 (of 3)
  • Luke pressed on, his blusterous form gone and his face ashen.
  • They blustered about how they would beat us all up.
  • A spokesman said that the blustery weather was likely to ease throughout the day, while temperatures will stay below freezing. Times, Sunday Times
  • I keep a firm grip on my hat and stare into the blustery abyss.
  • Sir Humphrey blustered at his only daughter tossing away her chances on an impoverished earl whose family had for generations possessed a reputation for being not quite bon ton. Earl of Durkness
  • He is as gruff as a bulldog's bark, yet underneath the hoary rock 'n' roll bluster, Lemmy, author of songs such as ‘Die You Bastard,’ is curiously old fashioned and a stickler for good manners.
  • The bluster, the straining for effect, the attempt to live up to a grandiose reputation of their own making - all these are absent.
  • Some comprimario and secondo roles were doubled up: Vladimir Hristov was both a George Clooney-suave Marchese d'Obigny and a bland Dr. Grenvil; Giorgio Dinev, previously seen enjoyably blustering as Tosca's Spoletta, doddered formulaically as Violetta's servant, but had mischevious sparkle as Gastone — having introduced his friend Alfredo to Violetta, he worked the room, pointing out his handiwork to the other guests, a proud yenta. Pretty Woman
  • The grass on the top was long and swayed in the winds that blustered over the downs.
  • a blustering kind of chield, without the heart of a sprug. ' Guy Mannering, Or, the Astrologer — Volume 01
  • He bludgeoned his way through arguments with arrogant bluster.
  • On a cold blustery night, a meal of pasta, fresh pesto and good Parmesan made me feel like summer might not be far away.
  • On a cold blustery March day in 1839, when she was nineteen, Susan moved with her family two miles down the Battenkill to the little settlement of Hardscrabble, later called Center Falls, where her father owned a satinet factory and grist mill, built in more prosperous times. Susan B. Anthony Rebel, Crusader, Humanitarian
  • Despite this, the cast members manage to make each character a believable one, with an individual personality, and show that beneath the bravado and bluster and laddish behaviour, there lurks a decent human being.
  • The forecast for today is blustery showers and heavy falls likely with some longer spells of rain expected.
  • The southern states are loud in vehement threats of secession, if the republican candidate is elected; but their bluster is really lamentably ludicrous, for they are without money, without credit, without power, without character – in short, sans everything, but so many millions of slaves, sans good numbers of whom they would also be the very moment they cut themselves adrift from the protection of the North. Further Records, 1848-1883: A Series of Letters
  • While the women's roles have been depicted with nuances and texture, his is all bluster and mannerism, with no depth.
  • Now, sir, this kind of blustering and bravado may sound very big up in A Controversy Between "Erskine" and "W. M." on the Practicability of Suppressing Gambling.
  • The front nine was tricky, especially in the blustery wind and the heavy showers we had. The Sun
  • Early on both sides struggled to master a blustery wind and a sometimes treacherous surface was made slippery by sheeting rain, but it was the visitors who threatened first.
  • The wind blustered around the house.
  • But he was not a man to indulge in empty bluster. Times, Sunday Times
  • Reagan and Bush Sr. succeeded in falsifying, blustering, and smearing their way out of political trouble. Did the Marines Die for Absolute Power? « Antiwar.com Blog
  • Like a blustering, hectoring aunt at a family gathering, he won't be missed by most.
  • A southeaster blustered onshore
  • They blustered about how they would beat us all up.
  • It is 100 per cent bluster and kidology but good on him. The Sun
  • The lake's deep green coloration derives from its high concentration of cobalt and other minerals, and is particularly striking when the frequent winds bluster the surface into a froth.
  •  A handsome younger man with a keen, guarded expression blustered into the room. Son of a Witch
  • Barely 12 hours after the final round of the British Open at blowy, blustery Royal Lytham and the newly-crowned champion and chums were cracking away on the other side of the world.
  • It is hard to read the auguries, so complex is this interplay of deception, self-deception, bluster and bluff.
  • After this morning's horrendous drive in the season's first blustery snowfall, motorists won't have it any easier on the way home.
  • When Johnson refers to his mind as ‘Summus… celsa dominator [in] arce ’, the elaborate periphrasis mockingly dramatizes the blustery ‘empty force’ of his mind's pretensions.
  • There's no parched grass, no blustery sky. Times, Sunday Times
  • And indeed, why should he have thought this difficult? seeing the herb ethiopis opens all locks whatsoever, and an echinus or remora, a silly weakly fish, in spite of all the winds that blow from the thirty-two points of the compass, will in the midst of a hurricane make you the biggest first-rate remain stock still, as if she were becalmed or the blustering tribe had blown their last. Five books of the lives, heroic deeds and sayings of Gargantua and his son Pantagruel
  • ‘Well,’ she blusters, ‘we've tried to add more depth and twists to our styles and fits to reinvent the market for younger customers.’
  • At half time in a game marred by a strong blustery wind blowing to the city end, North trailed by nine points.
  • No frills, no fuss and certainly no triumphant bluster. The Sun
  • A Coleraine win was probably never in doubt, but the more Newry held them out in the cold and blustery conditions, the more Ralph felt they had a chance of snatching a point.
  • It was thought," says Nashe, in his Quaternio, "a kind of solecism, and to savour of effeminacy, for a young gentleman in the flourishing time of his age to creep into a coach, and to shroud himself from wind and weather: our great delight was to outbrave the blustering Boreas upon a great horse; to arm and prepare ourselves to go with Mars and Bellona into the field, was our sport and pastime; coaches and caroches we left unto them for whom they were first invented, for ladies and gentlemen, and decrepit age and impotent people. Bracebridge Hall, or The Humorists
  • He should do so forthrightly but without bluster. Times, Sunday Times
  • I live on the Eastern coast of Florida The winds are currently blowing 24 mph with gusts up to 46 mph~ As Pooh says,"It's a blustery night! Spare a thought for the elephant
  • Lefty Liberal, I must confess to a certain perverse desire to see these obese old fools try to get it up, given all the machismo bluster and weapon brandishing. Think Progress » Tea partiers skip prayer and Pledge of Allegiance at opening of national convention.
  • She first pins her hopes on a Portuguese captain who turns out to be hollow blusterer.
  • Behind the broadcaster's hail-fellow-well-met demeanour and bluster lies an extremely astute and clued-in individual, who meets criticism of his television style with quotes from Mark Twain.
  • Many people will bluster aggressively when confronted, and then quietly stop doing what's been bugging you. The Guide to Greatness in Sales
  • One thing that slew me about Warburton's performance as the Tick: instead of the constant bluster of the cartoon voice, he would occasionally drop to a hushed tones that were pure Adam West.
  • They blustered about how they would beat us all up.
  • They charged that the president had presided over “four years of indecision, tactlessness, timidity, and bluster.” Eisenhower 1956
  • The blustery winds of spring had dropped to a gentle breeze.
  • They stood face to face under the balcony in the moonlight as the blustery rain teemed around them.
  • ‘Very, very few,’ Clarke finally blustered, to a snort from his interviewer.
  • The latest version from the banking and Wall Street bloats along with their Republican blusters always goes something like this: "Regulation will add a layer of rules that will stifle business ... Bob Franken: Regulation and the Betweeners
  • Only one of three fishermen who left Old Road Bay in a small fishing boat Monday in blustery weather with high gusting winds and heavy rain squalls has returned safely to the island.
  • Russell blustered his way through to the end, leaving corpses and mangled bodies in his wake. Several movies : Bev Vincent
  • True to form, just as we're waiting for a couple of dry, still days so we can do the outside paintwork, the weather today turned wet, wintry and exceeding blustery.
  • ‘This is the end of phase one of this fight,’ he blusters, ‘but the fight will go on and we will be in it together.’
  • See how they bluster, or say the wrong thing, or just look embarrassed. Banish Anxiety - how to stop worrying and take charge of your life
  • Low pressure, blustery winds and rain or showers will be the pattern for the remainder of the week. Times, Sunday Times
  • We are expected to follow their fickle games, before launching our rich domestic cargo upon those blue, blustering flames.
  • But, as you know, whenever the problem is delineated as cogently as Melanie has in this post (and many previous ones over the years), the hounds of hell are unleashed from the demiworld of deluded dreams to bark, bite, bluster and bullshit. On Thursday, the Legg report will be published along with...
  • When the blustering wind and swirling snow make sledding and building snowmen feel like work, ditch your icy mittens and spend the afternoon by a warm stove, sipping hot chocolate and munching on cookies.
  • A hot wind blustered up the track, informing her that the train was arriving.
  • There was little to arouse suspicion about the group of conspirators who converged on a rented house in Reykjavik on a blustery day three months ago. Times, Sunday Times
  • For all the bluster, Britain's ‘refugee crisis’ remains piffling compared to the size of the true environmental problem.
  • The overriding impression is one of mayhem, machismo, bluster and braggadocio.
  • The wintry weather took on freakish proportions with torrential rain turning to sideways sleet as the blustery wind continued to create havoc.
  • The only sounds we could hear were the blustering wind, and fluttering paper pressing against ruined hedges and walls.
  • See how they bluster, or say the wrong thing, or just look embarrassed. Banish Anxiety - how to stop worrying and take charge of your life
  • And it can win friends and influence people, at home and overseas, in a way that a show of force or diplomatic bluster might not. Times, Sunday Times
  • On the surface he was all bluster, bravado and cocksureness. He Knew He Was Right
  • The NFL's most blusterous coach, Rex Ryan, has been conspicuously silent since the Jets' brutal season ended.
  • HUGHLEY: I never knew what "blustery" meant, and now I do. CNN Transcript Dec 6, 2008
  • The short lesson is that no amount of bamboozlement and bluster will save politicians - or political operatives - when reality contradicts them.
  • He cussed and blustered and took the second option.
  • The weather begins to turn foul, with high winds and blustering rainsqualls, and because we laid over a day at the Judith to swim and loaf we begin to feel pressed to make time.
  • Jay started blustering around telling anyone who'd listen, and there weren't many volunteers, that the mess from the earlier food fight would have to be cleared up.
  • They blustered about how they would beat us all up.
  • It seems too intellectual to keep up any blusterous pretense to the contrary.
  • Everything about this modern family should be familiar enough, including the father and official family head, Zeek (Craig T. Nelson of "Coach"), a bull-in-a-china-shop blusterer with a heart of gold. You Can Go Home Again
  • I can almost feel summer coming, blustery winds aside. Times, Sunday Times
  • Her unshakeable belief in herself was no more than bluster, a tale full of sound and fury, signifying not very much. CHRISTINA QUEEN OF SWEDEN: The Restless Life of a European Eccentric
  • I also covered the White House for various media in the 1970s and 1980s, and learned first-hand from her about accuracy, fairness, balance, and how to wade through the morass of government bluster and bureaucratese. Magda Abu-Fadil: Happy Birthday Helen!
  • The 20-year-old Ulsterman started off "ropey" in his own words in the blustery, sand-swept conditions and then looked to Lady Luck to steady his dhow before producing four birdies on the back nine for a four-under 68. The Sydney Morning Herald News Headlines
  • Was it the blustery, cold weather that had everyone lazy as lizards on a cold rock?
  • Underneath all the bluster and talk of benefits, what they really want is to pay their way. Times, Sunday Times
  • Braving the blustery winds coming in from the Atlantic, three groups teed off just after mid-day, all suitably dressed for the prevailing weather.
  • This is a time for cool heads and reasoned arguments, not for bluster and provocation.
  • Of course they have their counterpart on the other side of the argument: the florid-faced, overweight beefeater astride his long-suffering mount, pompously blustering his right to do whatever he jolly well pleases.
  • If I'm -- but I'm not amenable to your reasons!" blustered the president, recovering a little from the first shock of terrified astoundment. The Price
  • An active cold front swept heavy rain and mountain snow eastwards on Friday with strong winds and blustery, wintry showers between sunny spells yesterday. Times, Sunday Times
  • One blustery damp morning, the minister had made a minor discovery about the gender and sexuality of the Liparis liparis. Soul
  • Howard blustered about mad officials meddling in people's lives and undermining plain common sense and individual responsibility.
  • San Francisco clinched NL West two weeks ago in breezy, blustery weather. ... USA TODAY Latest news
  • If he did he'd have surely come up with better arguments than bluster and bombast.
  • Many people lured here have scattered to South Africa's increasingly blustery winter winds.
  • The first two planned races had to be scrubbed because of blustery winds and rough seas.
  • "“What I have said and written would be enough for hundreds of dissertations, and to become an academician of the Academy of Sciences twice," said the blusterous leader.
  • Anyway, this river just happens to be where the climate is all windy and blustering so the currents lap at you and force you to go into the opposite direction, no matter how hard you try to fight against it.
  • The characters go beyond bluster as they talk, in pairs, while on leave before battle. Times, Sunday Times
  • There was bluster, bluff, and blarney, with everybody trying to talk over everybody else.
  • But he was not a man to indulge in empty bluster. Times, Sunday Times
  • It offends commonly if it be too [1510] hot and dry, thick, fuliginous, cloudy, blustering, or a tempestuous air. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • Underfoot it was slippery and there was a strong, blustery breeze.
  • The only draw back on that evening was the blustering wind, which with the seven pound mainline I was using, made the almost weightless end tackle difficult to cast more than about fifteen yards.
  • Heavy rain and a blustery cold wind made this a hard game to call and both teams deserve great credit for the quality of football they served up despite the adverse circumstances.
  • For when they were returning from the games over Pelias dead he slew them in sea-girt Tenos and heaped the earth round them, and placed two columns above, one of which, a great marvel for men to see, moves at the breath of the blustering north wind. The Argonautica
  • Whilst garage rock has blustered into the mainstream, this is a band that has more or less written the book on 21st century glittered, gutter level, punk with an IQ.
  • It speaks volumes when Smith, often criticized for his blusterous behavior, is the voice of reason.
  • We had been indeed fortunate that the weather had been so clement, for the third month was generally blustery, often blizzardy, and freezing cold. Artichoke
  • He blustered on about my trespassing gall, how I'd unsettled his half-starving cattle.
  • There they were, standing out against the people who were rushing on to get out of the blustery winds. they were wearing a ripped shirt and a dirty suit.
  • A little bluster and a few threats, mixed with a little sympathy and comradeliness. The Cardinal of the Kremlin
  • The addition of a bass player would probably make this music more conventional, like opting for the warm fug of a country pub instead of daring to go for a ridgewalk in blustery weather.
  • A beautifully silken red umbrella angled itself towards the edge of the cliff, mimicking the cliff's shape, as the tangible wind itself blustered its way around it. Clock
  • He captures the flicker of self-doubt beneath the bluster and swagger. Times, Sunday Times
  • It's a blustery day on Humble Island, a tiny speck of rock tucked into a bight on the south end of Anvers Island, Antarctica.

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