0 present participle of ventilate
1 to cause fresh air to enter and move around a closed space:
2 to express an opinion or mention a subject so that it can be discussed by others:
She used the meeting to ventilate all her grievances.
I found that the chapter on critical care clarified the dilemmas faced before ventilating patients.
He's not keen on a repetition of this, though he really does believe in public service and in ventilating issues.
Their frequent references to the past were largely associative and involuntary, and seem to have served the men as a means of ventilating their anxieties.
Although this method consumes more energy than passive or negative pressure ventilation, it reduces insect immigration while ventilating and cooling the greenhouse.
Heat could be collected through heat absorbing shading devices, ventilating glass walls, or heat-absorbing fluids.
This requires avoidance of anaerobic conditions, and the enclosing and ventilating of areas where raw sewage and primary solids are present.
The amenity of heating and ventilating large public buildings was a reward of the industrial revolution.
First, one may consider a layer flowing downhill with only a low ventilating velocity.