[A variant or parallel form of BLOB v.]

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  † I.  1. trans. To swell, puff out with weeping or otherwise. Obs.

2

1559.  Mirr. Mag., 112. My face was blown and blub’d with dropsy wan.

3

  † 2.  intr. To swell, protrude. Obs.

4

1684.  Southerne, Disappointm., II. i. Wks. (1721), 101. Her eyes and lips, see how they blubb and pout.

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  II.  3. Short for BLUBBER v. in sense 4. (colloq.)

6

1804.  Tarras, Poems, 124 (Jam.). Your cheeks are sae bleer’t, and sae blubbit adown?

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