1. buffeted - Adjective
2. buffeted - Verb
4. buffeted - Adjective Satellite
of Buffet
Source: Webster's dictionaryI shuddered from stem to stern, as stout barks do when buffeted by the waves. P. G. Wodehouse
As a society, I think we express our cultural mores through our politics. We're trying constantly to figure out what's OK and what's not OK. And it's hard, because our society is constantly buffeted by gale force winds of technology. Things are always changing. Daniel H. Wilson
Weathermen are the ponchoed buffoons who spend hurricanes outside, buffeted by winds, lashed by rains, struggling to stand erect. A mime's "walking against the wind" routine come horribly to life. Whereas meteorologists - we're the people who sent them out there. John Hodgman
Perhaps as the sway of tradition in our eating decisions weakens, habits we once took for granted are thrown up in the air, where they're more easily buffeted by a strong idea or a breeze of fashion. Michael Pollan
As they were buffeted by a convert swell, Borman was sick, waiting for the three flotation balloons to right the spacecraft. Source: Internet
And, public sector Punjab National Bank has been buffeted by controversies on whether its board should have been more vigilant in monitoring its human resource as mandated by the RBI. Source: Internet