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billow

Something billows when there's a fluid or blowing motion, such as the air filling a curtain at an open window, or smoke billowing from a fire.

This word originally meant a wave, and that image should help you remember its current meaning too. The word usually suggests movement and growth, such as waves building and crashing. There are certain clouds that look like ocean waves, and so are called billow clouds. If you have a big shirt, the wind might make it fill with air and billow. Balloons are billowed when you inflate them. Billowing can also mean to move with difficulty — slowly.

DEFINITIONS OF: billow

1

n a large sea wave

Synonyms:
surge
Type of:
moving ridge, wave
one of a series of ridges that moves across the surface of a liquid (especially across a large body of water)

v rise up as if in waves

“smoke billowed up into the sky”
Synonyms:
wallow
Types:
cloud
billow up in the form of a cloud
Type of:
soar, soar up, soar upwards, surge, zoom
rise rapidly

v rise and move, as in waves or billows

Synonyms:
heave, surge
Type of:
blow up, inflate
fill with gas or air

v move with great difficulty

“The soldiers billowed across the muddy riverbed”
Type of:
go, locomote, move, travel
change location; move, travel, or proceed, also metaphorically

v become inflated

Synonyms:
balloon, inflate
Types:
reflate
become inflated again
Type of:
expand
become larger in size or volume or quantity
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