Search results
- Dictionarybillow/ˈbɪləʊ/
noun
- 1. a large undulating mass of something, typically cloud, smoke, or steam. Similar
verb
- 1. (of fabric) fill with air and swell outwards: "her dress billowed out around her" Similar
Powered by Oxford Dictionaries
billow. noun [ C usually plural ] uk / ˈbɪl.əʊ / us / ˈbɪl.oʊ / a large, moving mass of something, such as smoke or cloud, that spreads over a large area: billows of smoke.
The meaning of BILLOW is wave; especially : a great wave or surge of water. How to use billow in a sentence.
a large wave; great swell of water. 2. any large swelling mass or surge, as of smoke, sound, etc. verb intransitive. 3. to surge, swell, or rise like or in a billow. verb transitive. 4. to make billow or surge.
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.
billow. noun [ C usually plural ] us / ˈbɪl.oʊ / uk / ˈbɪl.əʊ / a large, moving mass of something, such as smoke or cloud, that spreads over a large area: billows of smoke.
noun. a large sea wave. a swelling or surging mass, as of smoke or sound. a large atmospheric wave, usually in the lee of a hill. poetic. plural the sea itself.
n. 1. A large wave or swell of water. 2. A great swell, surge, or undulating mass, as of smoke or sound. v. bil·lowed, bil·low·ing, bil·lows. v.intr. 1. To surge or roll in billows. 2. To swell out or bulge: sheets billowing in the breeze. v.tr. To cause to billow: wind that billowed the sails.