Obs. rare. [app. ad. F. souffler:—L. sufflāre (see SUFFLATE).]

1

  1.  intr. To blow. (Cf. RUFFLE v.2 3.)

2

1622.  R. Hawkins, Voy. S. Sea (1847), 22. The wind began to suffle with fogge and misling rayne.

3

  2.  trans. To blow up.

4

1632.  Lithgow, Trav., IX. 382. Its Kind Is nurs’d by Raine, and suffled vp with wind.

5