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bloat
[bloht]
verb (used with object)
to expand or distend, as with air, water, etc.; cause to swell.
Overeating bloated their bellies.
to puff up; make vain or conceited.
The promotion has bloated his ego to an alarming degree.
to cure (fishes) as bloaters.
verb (used without object)
to become swollen; be puffed out or dilated.
The carcass started to bloat.
bloat
/ bləʊt /
verb
to swell or cause to swell, as with a liquid, air, or wind
to become or cause to be puffed up, as with conceit
(tr) to cure (fish, esp herring) by half-drying in smoke
noun
vet science an abnormal distention of the abdomen in cattle, sheep, etc, caused by accumulation of gas in the stomach
Word History and Origins
Origin of bloat1
Word History and Origins
Origin of bloat1
Example Sentences
Wall Street has plenty to be thankful for right now, with hopes of a Federal Reserve interest-rate cut in December helping investors to get over some of their fears about bloated artificial-intelligence valuations.
The result is bloated discussions, sluggish decisions and diluted expertise.
Two years before Mr. Musk had freed Twitter from bloat and mismanagement by cutting nearly four-fifths of employees and creating something that worked better.
Songs like “No Good Deed” and “March of the Witch Hunters” are chopped up and rearranged to allow for more dialogue and less emoting, distending the film into a bloated heap.
But that is partly to do with recent valuation bloat.
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