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full-blown ['ful'bləun]stresses
full-bore; full-fledged
gen. которого можно с полным правом назвать; уже́ (When he took over the Rakkasans, he was a full-blown colonel, and he went with us to Iraq.); полномасштабный (The drop in shares could develop into a full-blown crisis. • Fortunately, fears of a full-blown war resulting from political violence were not shared by the main political actors. • We are well on our way to another full-blown pandemic, with thousands more dying each day.); развитый (ssn); полный; полнофункциональный; настоящий (полностью соответствующий образу кого-либо: Back in the day, he used to love to get high. Just the party stuff, nothing hard. But it seems that after Newcastle, he's graduated to full-blown junkie.); развитой; пышный; комплексный (Ася Кудрявцева); полноценный (например: full-blow production deployment • an idea expanded into a full-blown novel • Many districts fill in those spots with uncertified teachers, like paraeducators, student teachers or substitutes without full-blown teaching licenses. vlad-and-slav)
bot. совсем распустившийся; полностью развившийся; полностью созревший; полностью распустившийся (В.И.Макаров); вполне распустившийся (о цветке); раскрывшийся (о цветке); взрослый; цветущий
disappr. законченный (Alex_Odeychuk); отпетый (Alex_Odeychuk)
med. резко выраженный; ярко выраженный (having attained the most fully developed or extreme form: full-blown tuberculosis • a full-blown panic attack • Aspirin reduces your chances of having a full-blown stroke. • The extremes range from occasional partial seizures of simple symptomatology without loss of consciousness to full-blown tonie-clonic seizures. • But doctors predicted that her chance of developing full-blown diabetes in the next five years was at least 1 in 4.)
mil., prop.&figur. массированный (Rather than a full-blown offensive to recover the province, which is packed with 3 million people, Assad's government has for now restricted its assault to the edges of the province with the aim of reopening key highways crossing through rebel-held areas. • Loretta Lynch's Justice Department just launched a full-blown offensive against FIFA. 4uzhoj)
nautic. наполненный ветром (о парусе: The schooner took to sea with full-blown sails); надутый (о парусе: The schooner took to sea with full-blown sails)
full blow
met. продувка до полного прекращения пламени; полное дутьё
full-blow
gen. полнофункциональный (vlad-and-slav)
 English thesaurus
full-blown ['ful'bləun]
gen. having all the qualities of something that is at its most complete or advanced stage (The drop in shares could develop into a full-blown crisis. • full-blown AIDS • As in any full-blown controversy, these polarised positions were the ones taken up by most contributors to the fight. • But doctors predicted that her chance of developing full-blown diabetes in the next five years was at least 1 in 4. • What began as a serious oil spill has become a full-blown environmental disaster. • Others again, such as physics, chemistry or history, have important professional associations or societies without being full-blown professions. • Now, however, they are being formally recognised as mild, but genuine, variations of full-blown psychosis. ldoceonline.com); having or displaying all the characteristic features (a full-blown financial crisis thefreedictionary.com); completely developed (an idea expanded into a full-blown book thefreedictionary.com); fully mature (merriam-webster.com); full-fledged (merriam-webster.com); possessing or exhibiting all the usual or necessary features or symptoms (A general philosophy, if not a full-blown ideology, is emerging. • He developed full-blown AIDS. merriam-webster.com); fully developed (The outbreak has the potential to become a full-blown pandemic. • Now it has developed into a full-blown national discussion about what it means to be British in the twenty-first century. • It takes typically eight to thirty years for damaged cells to develop into full-blown cancers. • It is in the deeper recesses of the lung where the Anthrax spores develop into full-blown Pulmonary Anthrax. • See a doctor or a psychiatrist quick before the illness develops into its full-blown form. • The consumer-credit problem has not yet developed into a full-blown crisis. • Of course, chimpanzees don't proceed to develop full-blown language the way you and I have. • Aeneas' son Iulus kills a pet stag while hunting, and from that small spark a full-blown war develops. • These people are more likely to develop full-blown depression at some point in their lives. • What began as a small commotion is quickly growing into a full-blown riot. • It is core to their lives, and that situation will remain as they mature into full-blown consumers. • All of a sudden, this little obsession of mine seem to have grown into a full-blown schoolboy crush. • Army personnel are in training in the event of a full-blown strike at the country's prisons. • If treated, pre-eclampsia rarely progresses to full-blown eclampsia and most women can have normal babies. • I expected it to turn into a full-blown cold or even flu over the weekend but, apart from the odd sneeze here and there, no other symptoms have materialised. • You don't need a complete full-blown language system like humans have in order to make it worthwhile. • Before these problems can flower into full-blown catastrophes something even worse happens. • When one in four girls admits to an incipient eating disorder, how do you pick out the ones who are in danger of a full-blown psychiatric complex? • The next stage, she says, is an attitude of helplessness about work, the full-blown Sisyphus complex. • My first full-blown love affair revolved entirely around a musical epiphany: a formal introduction to The Smiths. • By full time, it bordered on a full-blown travesty of justice. lexico.com); having all the characteristics of a particular type of thing or person (Before becoming a full-blown director, he worked as the film editor on Citizen Kane. collinsdictionary.com); having or displaying all the characteristics necessary for completeness (MLB avoided a full-blown debacle when the World Series ended in six games. • We are well on our way to another full-blown pandemic, with thousands more dying each day. • Even the unlucky patients with post-viral symptoms don’t always develop full-blown ME. • The fall was greater in those over 65, compared with younger age groups, and in those without symptoms compared with those with full-blown Covid-19. • He said the state was trying to stop a “full-blown second wave” like those occurring worldwide. • Many districts fill in those spots with uncertified teachers, like paraeducators, student teachers or substitutes without full-blown teaching licenses. • With nearly 1 million deaths worldwide, full-blown bereavement is the most recognizable. • How did the decision to open up these additional drop-off locations become a full-blown controversy? • White House sources told ABC News on Monday that there is “a full-blown freak-out” in the administration as aides wait to see who will be next to test positive. vocabulary.com); completely developed or formed (We are in the midst of a full-blown crisis. wiktionary.org)
bot. having blossomed or opened completely (of a flower: full-blown roses thefreedictionary.com); in full bloom (of a flower thefreedictionary.com); being at the height of bloom (of a flower merriam-webster.com); fully ripe (vocabulary.com); at the height of bloom (vocabulary.com); at the peak of blossom, ripe (The trees in the garden were resplendent with full-blown white gardenias. wiktionary.org)
med. having attained the most fully developed or extreme form (full-blown tuberculosis • a full-blown panic attack thefreedictionary.com)
nautic. filled with wind, puffed up (of sails: The schooner took to sea with full-blown sails. wiktionary.org)
full-blown: 73 phrases in 24 subjects
Automated equipment6
Botany1
Economy1
General21
Hydraulic engineering1
Idiomatic1
Immunology2
Information technology2
Makarov2
Mathematics2
Mechanics1
Medical7
Military4
Politics7
Programming1
Proper and figurative1
Psychiatry1
Public relations2
Rhetoric5
Scientific1
Slang1
Sports1
Technology1
United Nations1