English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

wind +‎ burned

Adjective edit

windburned (comparative more windburned, superlative most windburned)

  1. Of people or body parts: suffering from windburn.
    • 1916, Alfred Harmsworth, 1st Viscount Northcliffe, Lord Northcliffe’s War Book, New York: George H. Doran, ‘What to Send “Your Soldier”,’ p. 55,[1]
      Vaseline is a good gift. It can be used for may purposes. It serves as a lubricant. It eases feet that have marched far. It is good for burns. It relieves the pain of sunburnt or windburnt skin.
    • 1925, Zane Grey, chapter 13, in Captives of the Desert[2], Roslyn, NY: Walter J. Black:
      A more vivid red mounted the boy’s windburned face.
    • 1980, J. M. Coetzee, Waiting for the Barbarians, Penguin, published 1982, Chapter , p. 193:
      I am woken by a pounding on the door of my apartment. It is a man with a lantern, windburnt, gaunt, out of breath, in a solder’s greatcoat too large for him.
  2. Of plants: dried or damaged by the wind.
    • 1870 July, Charles Warren Stoddard, “Sail Ho!”, in The Overland Monthly, volume 5, number 1, page 30:
      The morning air blew down a fragrant whiff,
      Combing the wind-burnt grasses on the cliff.
    • 1939 November, California Garden, volume 31, number 5, page 7:
      [] the same general rules apply to wind-burned trees as to those injured by frost. You should wait until the full extent of the injury is apparent before cutting back.
    • 2005, Anne and Simon Harrap, Orchids of Britain and Ireland, London: A&C Black, 2nd edition, “Lindisfarne Helleborine,” p. 124,[3]
      By flowering time many leaves are wind-burnt, grazed or otherwise damaged.