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Bloom

   Also found in: Medical, Legal, Idioms, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.02 sec.
Bloom  (blm), Harold Born 1930.
American literary theorist and scholar whose works include The Anxiety of Influence (1972).

bloom 1  (blm)
n.
1.
a. The flower of a plant.
b. Something resembling the flower of a plant: "Her hair was caught all to one side in a great bloom of frizz" (Anne Tyler).
2.
a. The condition of being in flower: a rose in full bloom.
b. A condition or time of vigor, freshness, and beauty; prime: "the radiant bloom of Greek genius" (Edith Hamilton).
3. A fresh, rosy complexion: "She was short, plump, and fair, with a fine bloom" (Jane Austen).
4.
a. A waxy or powdery whitish to bluish coating on the surface of certain plant parts, as on cabbage leaves or on a plum or grape.
b. A similar coating, as on newly minted coins.
c. Grayish blotches or streaks on the surface of chocolate produced by the formation of cocoa butter crystals.
d. Chemistry See efflorescence.
5. Glare that is caused by a shiny object reflecting too much light into a television camera.
6. A visible, colored area on the surface of bodies of water caused by excessive planktonic growth.
v. bloomed, bloom·ing, blooms
v.intr.
1.
a. To bear a flower or flowers.
b. To support plant life in abundance: rains that made the yard bloom.
2. To shine; glow.
3. To grow or flourish with youth and vigor.
4. To appear or expand suddenly: White vapor bloomed from the side of the rocket's fuel tank.
v.tr.
1. To cause to flourish.
2. Obsolete To cause to flower.

[Middle English blom, from Old Norse blm; see bhel-3 in Indo-European roots.]

bloomy adj.
Synonyms: bloom1, blossom, efflorescence, florescence, flower, flush1, prime
These nouns denote a condition or time of greatest vigor and freshness: beauty in full bloom; the blossom of a great romance; the efflorescence of humanitarianism; the florescence of Greek civilization; in the flower of youthful enthusiasm; in the flush of their success; the prime of life.

bloom 2  (blm)
n.
1. A bar of steel prepared for rolling.
2. A mass of wrought iron ready for further working.

[Middle English blome, lump of metal, from Old English blma; see bhel-3 in Indo-European roots.]

bloom1
n
1. a blossom on a flowering plant; a flower
2. the state, time, or period when flowers open (esp in the phrases in bloom, in full bloom)
3. open flowers collectively a tree covered with bloom
4. a healthy, vigorous, or flourishing condition; prime (esp in the phrase the bloom of youth)
5. youthful or healthy rosiness in the cheeks or face; glow
6. (Life Sciences & Allied Applications / Botany) a fine whitish coating on the surface of fruits, leaves, etc., consisting of minute grains of a waxy substance
7. any coating similar in appearance, such as that on new coins
8. (Life Sciences & Allied Applications / Biology) Ecology a visible increase in the algal constituent of plankton, which may be seasonal or due to excessive organic pollution
9. (Miscellaneous Technologies / Building) Also called chill a dull area formed on the surface of gloss paint, lacquer, or varnish
vb (mainly intr)
1. (of flowers) to open; come into flower
2. to bear flowers; blossom
3. to flourish or grow
4. to be in a healthy, glowing, or flourishing condition
5. (Physics / General Physics) (tr) Physics to coat (a lens) with a thin layer of a substance, often magnesium fluoride, to eliminate surface reflection
[of Germanic origin; compare Old Norse blōm flower, Old High German bluomo, Middle Dutch bloeme; see blow3]

bloom2
n
(Engineering / Metallurgy) a rectangular mass of metal obtained by rolling or forging a cast ingot See also billet1 [2]
vb
(Engineering / Metallurgy) (tr) to convert (an ingot) into a bloom by rolling or forging
[Old English blōma lump of metal]
ThesaurusLegend:  Synonyms Related Words Antonyms
Noun1.bloom - the organic process of bearing flowers; "you will stop all bloom if you let the flowers go to seed"
biological process, organic process - a process occurring in living organisms
2.Bloombloom - reproductive organ of angiosperm plants especially one having showy or colorful parts
angiosperm, flowering plant - plants having seeds in a closed ovary
floret, floweret - a diminutive flower (especially one that is part of a composite flower)
apetalous flower - flower having no petals
inflorescence - the flowering part of a plant or arrangement of flowers on a stalk
ray floret, ray flower - small flower with a flat strap-shaped corolla usually occupying the peripheral rings of a composite flower
bud - a partially opened flower
stamen - the male reproductive organ of a flower
reproductive structure - the parts of a plant involved in its reproduction
pistil - the female ovule-bearing part of a flower composed of ovary and style and stigma
carpel - a simple pistil or one element of a compound pistil
ovary - the organ that bears the ovules of a flower
floral leaf - a modified leaf that is part of a flower
chlamys, floral envelope, perianth, perigone, perigonium - collective term for the outer parts of a flower consisting of the calyx and corolla and enclosing the stamens and pistils
chrysanthemum - the flower of a chrysanthemum plant
3.bloom - the best time of youth
time of life - a period of time during which a person is normally in a particular life state
youth - the time of life between childhood and maturity
4.Bloombloom - a rosy color (especially in the cheeks) taken as a sign of good health
good health, healthiness - the state of being vigorous and free from bodily or mental disease
5.bloom - the period of greatest prosperity or productivity
period, period of time, time period - an amount of time; "a time period of 30 years"; "hastened the period of time of his recovery"; "Picasso's blue period"
golden age - a time period when some activity or skill was at its peak; "it was the golden age of cinema"
6.bloom - a powdery deposit on a surface
crystallisation, crystallization, crystallizing - the formation of crystals
Verb1.bloom - produce or yield flowers; "The cherry tree bloomed"
develop - grow, progress, unfold, or evolve through a process of evolution, natural growth, differentiation, or a conducive environment; "A flower developed on the branch"; "The country developed into a mighty superpower"; "The embryo develops into a fetus"; "This situation has developed over a long time"
effloresce, burst forth - come into or as if into flower; "These manifestations effloresced in the past"

bloom
noun
1. flower, bud, blossom Harry carefully plucked the bloom.
2. prime, flower, beauty, height, peak, flourishing, maturity, perfection, best days, heyday, zenith, full flowering in the full bloom of youth
3. glow, flush, blush, freshness, lustre, radiance, rosiness The skin loses its youthful bloom.
glow whiteness, pallor, paleness, wanness, bloodlessness
verb
1. flower, blossom, open, bud This plant blooms between May and June.
flower die, waste, fade, shrink, wither, wilt, perish, droop, shrivel
2. grow, develop, wax, blossom She bloomed into an utterly beautiful creature.
3. succeed, flourish, thrive, prosper, fare well Not many economies bloomed in 1990.
succeed fail, decline, decay, wane, languish
Translations
bloom [bluːm]
A. N
1. (= flower) → flor f; (on fruit) → vello m, pelusa f
in bloomen flor
in full bloomen plena floración
in the full bloom of youthen la flor de la juventud
to come into bloomflorecer
2. (fig) (on complexion) → rubor m
B. VI [flower] → abrirse; [tree] → florecer (fig) [economy, industry] → prosperar

bloom [ˈbluːm]
n (= flower) → fleur f
to be in bloom [plant, tree] → être en fleur
[skin] → velouté m
vi
[tree] → fleurir; [flower] → éclore
[person] → s'épanouir
to bloom into → devenir
[romance, relationship, talent] → s'épanouir; [economy] → fleurir

bloom
n
Blüte f; to be in (full) bloomin (voller) Blüte stehen; to come/burst into bloomaufblühen/plötzlich erblühen
(fig) her skin has lost its bloomihre Haut ist welk geworden; in the bloom of youthin der Blüte der Jugend; in the first bloom of lovein der ersten Begeisterung ihrer Liebe
(on fruit) → satter Schimmer; (on peaches) → Flaum m
vi (lit, fig)blühen

bloom [bluːm]
1. n (flower) → fiore m; (on fruit) → lanugine f; (on complexion) → colorito roseo
in bloom (flower) → sbocciato/a (tree) → in fiore
in full bloom → in piena fioritura
in the full bloom of youth → nel fiore della giovinezza
2. vi (flower) → aprirsi; (tree) → sfiorire

bloom [bluːm]
1. n (flower) → fiore m; (on fruit) → lanugine f; (on complexion) → colorito roseo
in bloom (flower) → sbocciato/a (tree) → in fiore
in full bloom → in piena fioritura
in the full bloom of youth → nel fiore della giovinezza
2. vi (flower) → aprirsi; (tree) → sfiorire

bloom
n bloom [bluːm]
1 a flower These blooms are withering now. bloeisel زَهْرَةٌ، نَوْرَةٌ цвете květ, květina blomst die Blume άνθος flor õis شکوفه؛ غنچه kukka fleur פֶּרַח फूल cvijet virág bunga blóm fiore žiedas zieds bunga bloem blomst kwiat flor floare цветок kvet, kvetina cvetica cvet blomma ดอกไม้ çiçek цвіт پھول کلیاں hoa
2 the state of flowering The flowers are in bloom. bloei إِزْهارٌ цъфтеж květ blomstring die Blüte άνθιση, ανθοφορία floración, en flor õites شکفتن؛ غنچه کردن kukkiminen floraison פְּרִיחָה फूल खिलना cvat virágzás berkembang blómi, blómatími fioritura 開花 개화 žydėjimas ziedēšana kembang bloei blomstring, i full blomst kwitnięcie em flor înflorire цветение kvet razcvet cvetanje blom การออกดอก çiçeklenme 開花 цвітіння کلیوں کا کھلنا sự ra hoa
3 freshness in the bloom of youth. prulle نَضارَةٌ свежест rozkvět ungdommens vår die Blüte φρεσκάδα estar en la flor de (la vida), lozanía, frescura õitseaeg عنفوان؛ اوج nuoruuden fleur פְּרִיחָה, לִבלוּב ताजगी svjež izgled ifjúsága teljében kesegaran blómatími/-skeið fiore 盛り 젊음 pats žydėjimas plaukums; ziedu laiks dikemuncak remaja bloei ungdommens vår wiosna frescura floare расцвет kvet, rozkvet cvet cvet i blomman av, blomstring ความสดชื่น bahar, tazelik 朝氣蓬勃 розквіт تازگی tuổi thanh xuân
v
to flower or flourish Daffodils bloom in the spring. bloei يُزْهِرُ، يُنَوِّرُ разцъфвам rozkvétat blomstre blühen ανθίζω, αναπτύσσομαι florecer õitsema شکفتن؛ گل دادن kukoistaa fleurir לִפרוֹח, לְלָבלֵב फूल खिलना cvasti virágzik mekar blómstra fiorire 咲く 꽃이 피다 žydėti ziedēt; plaukt berkembang bloeien blomstre kwitnąć florescer a înflori цвести kvitnúť cveteti cvetati blomma เบ่งบาน çiçek açmak, çiçeklenmek 開花 цвісти; розквітати پھولوں کا جوبن پر ہونا nở hoa


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And the women of New Bedford, they bloom like their own red roses.
Now the face of Nicolete, as I learnt in time to call her, was just soul and bloom, perhaps mainly bloom.
They give to us their all; ought we not to toil unceasingly, that they may bloom in peace within their quiet homes?
 
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