How To Use Blow over In A Sentence

  • They hoped that the disturbances would soon blow over.
  • The questions mooted he referred to a mere monkish jealousy -- an unsober gust of passion which would soon blow over. Luther and the Reformation: The Life-Springs of Our Liberties
  • You tell Lindsay not to sweat it - the whole thing is bound to blow over in a week or two.
  • The biggest, a massive blow over long-on, cleared the indoor school. Times, Sunday Times
  • The scandal will soon blow over.
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  • The natural process is just like the freeze blow over the water surface.
  • Anyone who has tried it knows that trees don't grow well on high moorland and are liable to blow over before maturity. Times, Sunday Times
  • Wait, and it'll all blow over.
  • The clouds will soon blow over.
  • Two years later I sat in the little town of Loreto watching the whitecaps blow over the ocean.
  • And not only that, but one paper this week quoted here in Washington that he said: "Ah, this is going to blow over and everybody is going to forgot about it," The cockiness is a little bit suspect. CNN Transcript Jul 20, 2001
  • Or will this whole thing blow over in a months and won't be remembered until the next multimillion dollar big business scandal?
  • The other saving grace is that springtime hailstorms usually blow over fairly quickly. Times, Sunday Times
  • The impression is so deep that it can hardly ever blow over.
  • When did you last come across a wind on the British mainland strong enough to blow over a piano? Times, Sunday Times
  • Dust from the tailings pond began to blow over the countryside again in 1985, starting on 10 February, a Sunday.
  • In the trapped heat of the Apennines, they cling to the refracted possibility that the scarce coolness from the snow-covered peaks will blow over and down.
  • The scenes in the subterranean offices of the Admiralty are remarkably subdued; the war seems to be a deuced spot of bother bound to blow over any day now, but damned unpleasant in the clinch, eh?
  • Wait, and it'll all blow over.
  • Bogan didn't seem to think the thing was so serious as it was, for he only went a few miles down the river and camped with his horses on a sort of island inside an anabranch, till the thing should blow over or the new chums leave Bourke. Children of the Bush
  • The clouds will soon blow over.
  • Those outside America, in the chanceries of Europe and beyond, who hoped that this would be a passing phase, like a Florida hurricane that wreaks havoc only to blow over, will instead have to adjust to a different reality.
  • The impression is so deep that it can hardly ever blow over.

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