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Hmm, "air blown" is actually a legit plumbing term I remember from construction classes. It refers to forcing air through pipes instead of water during pressure testing before connecting utilities or sprinklers. Not something most folks encounter daily unless they're building houses. The user seems like they're either in the trades themselves (maybe an HVAC tech? Firefighter installing sprinkler systems?) or just someone who enjoys quirky vocabulary juxtaposed with darker concepts. The request for edgy suggests they want maximum contrast between the silly definition and serious consequence angle. Let's lean into thatâfirst break down what "air blown" technically means, then morph it into something relatable but slightly disturbing. Construction humor works well here because it's a universal experience even if you didn't build anything: everyone has felt an air blow in weird places. But the example should be... let's see... not too graphic but still unsettling enough to spark that "oh no" reaction. The plumbing pressure test scenario is perfectârelatable, everyday-ish consequences when blown wrong, and visualizes how literal this term can get while keeping it PG for maximum humor without being gross. The fire sprinkler example adds punchline weight because those pipes aren't meant to be air-blown (they're deadly serious