blah

interjection
UK: /blɑː/
US: /blɑː/
  1. Used to represent words or speech when they are not important or you don't remember them.

    1. He said blah blah about the weather. [ ] [ ]
    2. She went on blah blah something about needing to leave early, I wasn't listening. [ ] [ ]
  2. Something that you say when you are not interested in something you are hearing.

    1. Blah, I don't care about your problems. [ ] [ ]
    2. It's just blah blah from him as he always complains about his work. [ ] [ ]
blah verb
  1. Talk at length about something boring or meaningless.

    1. He blah-blahed on about his car. [ ] [ ]
    2. She blah-blahed about her vacation for hours, and nobody was interested in her blah talk. [ ] [ ]
blah adjective
  1. Lacking interest or excitement dull or boring.

    1. This party is blah. [ ] [ ]
    2. The movie was so blah that I almost fell asleep during the blah scenes. [ ] [ ]

Frequently Asked Questions

The word "blah" in English means: Used to represent words or speech when they are not important or you don't remember them., Something that you say when you are not interested in something you are hearing..

The phonetic transcription of "blah" is /blɑː/ in British English and /blɑː/ in American English. Click the 🔊 button to hear both pronunciations.

Synonyms for "blah": balderdash, drivel, dull, uninteresting, boring, rubbish, yada yada, etcetera, nonsense, twaddle.

Example usage of "blah": "He said blah blah about the weather.". More examples on the page.