Associations to the word «Blackout»
Noun
- Villain
- Rider
- Whisky
- Buccaneer
- Tsunami
- Blocking
- Broadcaster
- Recollection
- Disaster
- Vulnerability
- Abel
- Inability
- Bomb
- Convoy
- Woody
- Nate
- Orb
- Maneuver
- Outsider
- Paint
- Cbc
- Incident
- Collapse
- Grenade
- Sketch
- Spike
- Queens
- Demand
- Feed
- Damage
- Switching
- Sell
- Urge
- Reactor
- Feud
- Supply
- Airing
- Zen
- Cause
- Fuse
- Lift
- Market
- Infrastructure
- Tko
- Hood
- Earthquake
- Bowie
- Bonnet
- Attendance
- Period
- Memory
- Hour
- Loss
- Album
- Trigger
- Pe
- Olivia
- Diesel
- Spacecraft
- Outside
- Occurrence
- Foam
- Storm
- Duration
- Spider
- Provider
- Bonus
- Darkness
- Monroe
Adjective
Adverb
Wiktionary
BLACKOUT, noun. A temporary loss of consciousness.
BLACKOUT, noun. A temporary loss of memory.
BLACKOUT, noun. A large-scale power failure, and resulting loss of electricity to consumers.
BLACKOUT, noun. The mandatory blocking of all light emanating from buildings as imposed during World War II.
BLACKOUT CAKE, noun. A rich chocolate cake made with chocolate pudding.
BLACKOUT CAKES, noun. Plural of blackout cake
BLACKOUT LAMP, noun. A hand-held lamp that has sliding or rotating doors to adjust the amount of light emitted.
BLACKOUT LAMPS, noun. Plural of blackout lamp
Dictionary definition
BLACKOUT, noun. A suspension of radio or tv broadcasting.
BLACKOUT, noun. Darkness resulting from the extinction of lights (as in a city invisible to enemy aircraft).
BLACKOUT, noun. The failure of electric power for a general region.
BLACKOUT, noun. A momentary loss of consciousness.
BLACKOUT, noun. Partial or total loss of memory; "he has a total blackout for events of the evening".
Wise words
The chief virtue that language can have is clearness, and
nothing detracts from it so much as the use of unfamiliar
words.