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blister

noun

  1. small pocket of fluid within the upper layers of the skin
L30251 on Wikidata ↗

verb

  1. (Cause) formation of blisters
  2. Scald, verbally or in writing
L30252 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /ˈblɪstə(ɹ)/ / /ˈblɪstɚ/

noun

Etymology: From Middle English blister, from Old French blestre, from a Germanic source. Compare Middle Dutch blyster (“swelling”), Old Norse blastr (“a blowing”).

  1. A small bubble between the layers of the skin that contains watery or bloody fluid and is caused by friction and pressure, burning, freezing, chemical irritation, disease, or infection.

    Inspect them for rub marks and blisters; tape or bandage rub marks; clean the skin around a blister, use a sterilised needle to puncture it at its outer edge and press out the fluid, then bandage.

  2. A swelling on a plant.
  3. Something applied to the skin to raise a blister; a vesicatory or other applied medicine.

    'T is written in the Hebrew Chronicle, / How the physicians, leaving pill and potion, / Prescribed, by way of blister, a young belle, / When old King David's blood grew dull in motion, / And that the medicine answered very well […]

  4. A bubble, as on a painted surface.
  5. An enclosed pocket of air, which may be mixed with water or solvent vapor, trapped between impermeable layers of felt or between the membrane and substrate.
  6. A type of pre-formed packaging made from plastic that contains cavities.

    blister card

    blister pack

  7. A cause of annoyance.

    I couldn't help thinking how dashed happy I could have contrived to be in this place if only Aunt Agatha and the other blisters had been elsewhere.

    I will say, however, that we fanned her well — her and her old blister of a mother and a bewhiskered old goat named Boris.

  8. A form of smelted copper with a blistered surface.

verb

Etymology: From Middle English blister, from Old French blestre, from a Germanic source. Compare Middle Dutch blyster (“swelling”), Old Norse blastr (“a blowing”).

  1. To raise blisters on.

    a chemical agent that blisters the skin

    Caliban: As wicked dewe, as ere my mother bruſh'd / With Rauens feather from vnwholeſome Fen / Drop on you both : A Southweſt blow on yee, / And bliſter you all ore.

  2. To sear after blaching.
  3. To have a blister form.

    A poorly formulated mortar mixture will result in plaster that blisters and cracks.

    An overfired glaze often blisters by the volatilization of part of its composition. It also reaches a stage where its viscosity is too low to keep it on the pot.

  4. To criticise severely.
  5. To break out in blisters.