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Be wary of huffing and puffing, staggering
Answer for the clue "Be wary of huffing and puffing, staggering ", 12 letters:
mind-blowing
Word definitions for mind-blowing in dictionaries
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
a. 1 hallucinogenic 2 having an overwhelming effect on the imagination; mind-boggling
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
adj. intensely affecting the mind especially in producing hallucinations [syn: mind-bending ] intensely affecting the mind or emotions; "spending a week in the jungle was a mind-blowing experience"; "a mind-blowing horror story"
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
mind-blowing \mind-blowing\ adj. mind-bending. [informal] Syn: . intensely affecting the mind or emotions; astonishing; -- usually referring to extraordinary experiences; as, spending a week in the jungle was a mind-blowing experience; a mind-blowing horror ...
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
adjective EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES ▪ The astronauts had mind-blowing views of planet Earth. EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ It is mind-blowing , and I speak as an expert. ▪ One day I had a mind-blowing experience. ▪ What happened in the next 15 minutes is hard ...
Usage examples of mind-blowing.
I get to natter on about a subject that I'm nearly autistically fixated on, and I do it in a context where I know that I'm sane and smart and charming and occasionally mind-blowing.
He then wandered all over the ancient world, learning all sorts of secrets and leaving behind a priceless collection of mind-blowing legends—he's the Phoenix Madman mentioned in the Confucian scriptures, and he passed himself off as Krishna to recite that gorgeous Bible of revolutionary ethics, the Bhaga-vad Gita, to Arjuna in India, among other feats.
He then wandered all over the ancient world, learning all sorts of secrets and leaving behind a priceless collection of mind-blowing legends— he's the Phoenix Madman mentioned in the Confucian scriptures, and he passed himself off as Krishna to recite that gorgeous Bible of revolutionary ethics, the Bhaga-vad Gita, to Arjuna in India, among other feats.
The bell tower of an old Spanish church rises up above the coconut palms not far away, carved from blocks of volcanic tuff that are beginning to glow in the lambency of another damn mind-blowing tropical sunset.