Online Google Dictionary

blowups 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
  1. (blowup) explosion: a violent release of energy caused by a chemical or nuclear reaction
  2. (blowup) effusion: an unrestrained expression of emotion
  3. (blowup) enlargement: a photographic print that has been enlarged
  4. Blowup is a 1966 British-Italian film directed by Michelangelo Antonioni, his first English-language film. ...
  5. (Blow-up) Any enlargement of photos, copies, or line art.
  6. (Blow-up) fit of anger. “He and the missus had a blow-up, but it’s over, now.”
  7. (Blowup) enlargement; a print that is made larger than the negative or slide.
  8. (Blow-up) A sudden increase in fire intensity or rate of spread strong enough to prevent direct control or to upset control plans. Blow-ups are often accompanied by violent convection and may have other characteristics of a fire storm. (See Flare-up.)
  9. (Blow-Up) A film enlargement from a smaller gauge of film to a larger gauge (i.e. 16mm to 35mm).
  10. (Blow-up) A blister between plies of an article.
  11. (Blow-up) When a ridden or handled horse becomes hyper-reactive during training and exhibits behaviours ranging from mild tension to bucking or breaks from the gait in which it is meant to be travelling. It is most common in early training and exposure to novel environments as in ‘showing’. ...
  12. (Blow-up) enlargement of a perfect photograph. The 4/3ian always looks out for an opportunity like this.
  13. (Blowup (or buckling)) A localized upward PCC slab movement and shattering at a joint or crack.  Usually occurs in spring or summer and is the result of insufficient room for slab expansion during hot weather. ...
  14. (Blowup) A dangerously rapid increase in fire spread.
  15. (Blowup) A style of breaking which focuses on the “wow factor” of certain power moves, freezes. Blowup-style consists of performing a sequence of as many difficult trick combinations in as quick succession as possible. ...
  16. (Blowup) An enlargement created from a smaller slide and printed onto paper or some other light-sensitive surface.
  17. (Blowup) Sudden dangerous increase in fireline intensity typically caused by strong or erratic wind, steep slopes, large open areas, and easily ignited fuels. ...
  18. (blowup) the raising of two concrete slabs off the subgrade where they meet as a result of greater expansion than the joint between them will accommodate; typically occurs only in unusually hot weather where joints have become filled with incompressible material; often results in cracks on both ...