Wind
Spanish Meaning
viento curva recodo manivela aire flato flatulencia pedo eructo aliento resuello instrumentos de viento del viento eólica eólico enrollar envolver encanillar quedar devanar ovillar dar vueltas a girar dar cuerda remontar serpentear torcer enroscarse
English Meaning
- Moving air, especially a natural and perceptible movement of air parallel to or along the ground.
- A movement of air generated artificially, as by bellows or a fan.
- The direction from which a movement of air comes: The wind is north-northwest.
- A movement of air coming from one of the four cardinal points of the compass: the four winds.
- Moving air carrying sound, an odor, or a scent.
- Breath, especially normal or adequate breathing; respiration: had the wind knocked out of them.
- Gas produced in the stomach or intestines during digestion; flatulence.
- Music The brass and woodwinds sections of a band or orchestra. Often used in the plural.
- Music Wind instruments or their players considered as a group. Often used in the plural.
- Music Woodwinds. Often used in the plural.
- Something that disrupts or destroys: the winds of war.
- A tendency; a trend: the winds of change.
- Information, especially of something concealed; intimation: Trouble will ensue if wind of this scandal gets out.
- Speech or writing empty of meaning; verbiage: His remarks on the subject are nothing but wind.
- Vain self-importance; pomposity: an expert who was full of wind even before becoming famous.
- To expose to free movement of air; ventilate or dry.
- To detect the smell of; catch a scent of.
- To pursue by following a scent.
- To cause to be out of or short of breath.
- To afford a recovery of breath: stopped to wind and water the horses.
- before the wind Nautical In the same direction as the wind.
- close to the wind Nautical As close as possible to the direction from which the wind is blowing.
- in the wind Likely to occur; in the offing: Big changes are in the wind.
- near the wind Nautical Close to the wind.
- near the wind Close to danger.
- off the wind Nautical In a direction away from the wind.
- on Nautical In the same or nearly the same direction as the wind.
- take the wind out of (one's) sails To rob of an advantage; deflate.
- under the wind Nautical To the leeward.
- under the wind In a location protected from the wind.
- up the wind Nautical In a direction opposite or nearly opposite the wind.
- To wrap (something) around a center or another object once or repeatedly: wind string around a spool.
- To wrap or encircle (an object) in a series of coils; entwine: wound her injured leg with a bandage; wound the waist of the gown with lace and ribbons.
- To go along (a curving or twisting course): wind a path through the mountains.
- To proceed on (one's way) with a curving or twisting course.
- To introduce in a disguised or devious manner; insinuate: He wound a plea for money into his letter.
- To turn (a crank, for example) in a series of circular motions.
- To coil the spring of (a mechanism) by turning a stem or cord, for example: wind a watch.
- To coil (thread, for example), as onto a spool or into a ball.
- To remove or unwind (thread, for example), as from a spool: wound the line off the reel.
- To lift or haul by means of a windlass or winch: Wind the pail to the top of the well.
- To move in or have a curving or twisting course: a river winding through a valley.
- To move in or have a spiral or circular course: a column of smoke winding into the sky.
- To be coiled or spiraled: The vine wound about the trellis.
- To be twisted or whorled into curved forms.
- To proceed misleadingly or insidiously in discourse or conduct.
- To become wound: a clock that winds with difficulty.
- The act of winding.
- A single turn, twist, or curve.
- wind down Informal To diminish gradually in energy, intensity, or scope: The party wound down as guests began to leave.
- wind down Informal To relax; unwind.
- wind up To come or bring to a finish; end: when the meeting wound up; wind up a project.
- wind up To put in order; settle: wound up her affairs before leaving the country.
- wind up Informal To arrive in a place or situation after or because of a course of action: took a long walk and wound up at the edge of town; overspent and wound up in debt.
- wind up Baseball To swing back the arm and raise the foot in preparation for pitching the ball.
- Music To blow (a wind instrument).
- Music To sound by blowing.