Puff
WordNet
adjective
(1) Gathered for protruding fullness
"Puff sleeves"
noun
(2) Forceful exhalation through the nose or mouth
"He gave his nose a loud blow"
"He blew out all the candles with a single puff"
(3) A slow inhalation (as of tobacco smoke)
"He took a puff on his pipe"
"He took a drag on his cigarette and expelled the smoke slowly"
(4) Thick cushion used as a seat
(5) A soft spherical object made from fluffy fibers; for applying powder to the skin
(6) Bedding made of two layers of cloth filled with stuffing and stitched together
(7) Exaggerated praise (as for promotional purposes)
(8) A light inflated pastry or puff shell
(9) A short light gust of air
verb
(10) Breathe noisily, as when one is exhausted
"The runners reached the finish line, panting heavily"
(11) Blow hard and loudly
"He huffed and puffed as he made his way up the mountain"
(12) To swell or cause to enlarge, "Her faced puffed up from the drugs"
"Puffed out chests"
(13) Speak in a blustering or scornful manner
"A puffing kind of man"
(14) Praise extravagantly
"The critics puffed up this Broadway production"
(15) Smoke and exhale strongly
"Puff a cigar"
"Whiff a pipe"
(16) Suck in or take (air)
"Draw a deep breath"
"Draw on a cigarette"
(17) Make proud or conceited
"The sudden fame puffed her ego"
WiktionaryText
Noun
- A sharp exhalation of a small amount of breath through the mouth.
- The ability to breathe easily while exerting oneself.
- out of puff
- A small quantity of gas or smoke in the air.
- puff of smoke
- puff of wind
- An act of inhaling smoke from a cigarette, cigar or pipe.
- A flamboyant or alluring statement about an object's quality.
- 1842, "A Paper on Puffing", in Ainsworth's Magazine
- Is nothing to be said in praise of the "Emporiums" and "Repositories" and "Divans," which formerly were mere insignificant tailors', toymen's, and tobacconists' shops? Is the transition from the barber's pole to the revolving bust of the perruquier, nothing? — the leap from the bare counter-traversed shop to the carpeted and mirrored saloon of trade, nothing? Arc they not, one and all, practical puffs, intended to invest commerce with elegance, and to throw a halo round extravagance?
- 1848, Mrs. White, "Puffs and Puffing", in Sharpe's London Magazine
- Here the duke is made the vehicle of the tailor's advertisement, and the prelusive compliments, ostensibly meant for his grace, merge into a covert recommendation of the coat. Several specimens might be given of this species of puff, which is to be met with in almost every paper, and is a favourite form with booksellers, professional men, &e.
- 2008, David Paton-Williamspage, Katterfelto, page xii
- He was the eighteenth century king of spin, or, in the language of the day, the "prince of puff".
- 1842, "A Paper on Puffing", in Ainsworth's Magazine
- The drug cannabis.
- A light cake filled with cream, cream cheese, etc.
- cream puff
- a homosexual; a poof
Synonyms
wind drag blow, dope, ganja, pot, weed; see also Wiktionary appendix of cannabis slang pastry See poofVerb
- To emit smoke, gas, etc., in puffs.
- To pant.
- To advertise (archaic)