Idioms for blast
at full blast,
at maximum capacity; at or with full volume or speed: The factory is going at full blast.
Also full blast.
Origin of blast
before 1000; 1955–60
for def 7a; Middle English (noun and v.); Old English
blǣst (noun) a blowing; akin to Old Norse
blāstr, Old High German
blāst (derivative of
blāsan, cognate with Gothic
ufblēsan, Old Norse
blāsa). See
blow2
OTHER WORDS FROM blast
blast·er, noun blast·y, adjectiveWords nearby blast
Definition for blast (2 of 3)
blasto-
a combining form meaning “bud, sprout,” “embryo,” “formative cells or cell layer,” used in the formation of compound words: blastosphere.
Also
especially before a vowel,
blast-.
See also
-blast.
Origin of blasto-
< Greek, combining form of
blastós a bud, sprout
Definition for blast (3 of 3)
-blast
a combining form meaning “bud, sprout,” “embryo,” “formative cells or cell layer,” used in the formation of compound words: ectoblast.
Origin of -blast
< Greek, combining form of
blastós a bud, sprout
Example sentences from the Web for blast
British Dictionary definitions for blast (1 of 3)
blast
/ (blɑːst) /
noun
interjection
slang
an exclamation of annoyance (esp in phrases such as blast it! and blast him!)
verb
See also
blastoff
Derived forms of blast
blaster, nounWord Origin for blast
Old English
blǣst, related to Old Norse
blāstr
British Dictionary definitions for blast (2 of 3)
-blast
n combining form
(in biology) indicating an embryonic cell or formative layer
mesoblast
Word Origin for -blast
from Greek
blastos bud
British Dictionary definitions for blast (3 of 3)
blasto-
combining form
(in biology) indicating an embryo or bud or the process of budding
blastoderm
Word Origin for blasto-
from Greek
blastos; see
-blast
Medical definitions for blast (1 of 2)
-blast
suff.
An immature, embryonic stage in the development of cells or tissues:erythroblast.
Medical definitions for blast (2 of 2)
blasto-
pref.
Bud; germ; budding; germination:blastocyst.
Idioms and Phrases with blast
blast