blow off

VERB
  1. come off due to an explosion or other strong force
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How To Use blow off In A Sentence

  • She just needed to blow off steam.
  • Picking up a small dandelion as they walked, Sara struggled to blow off all the flimsy, feathery seedlings.
  • They blow off the Mojave, bringing sickness, on occasion, and the threat of fire. COLDHEART CANYON
  • Jody lets her blow off steam first.
  • Grandma: On the floor or I blow off little achmed! The Sudden Curve:
  • Sinking yields - in the face of an acute inflationary ‘blow off’ bias throughout mortgage finance - will only stimulate greater non-productive debt expansion.
  • When northwesterlies blow off Salisbury Plain they squeeze through Southampton Water like water pouring down a funnel. Cowes weatherwatch
  • It's the place of choice for all sorts of hard-living roustabouts who come into town to blow off a little steam after long days, weeks or even months of toil in the mines and lumber camps.
  • To blow off steam, he gave us the next day off, and we went bass fishing.
  • I went jogging to blow off some steam.
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