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blowy

[ UK /blˈə‍ʊi/ ]
[ US /ˈbɫoʊi/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. abounding in or exposed to the wind or breezes
    a windy bluff
    blowy weather

How To Use blowy In A Sentence

  • However, in blowy conditions at St Teresa's pitch on the Glen Road in Belfast, the St. Louis boys finally made the dream become a reality as they toppled a very physical Loreto College, Coleraine team.
  • blowy weather
  • On a blowy day in Kilburn, north London, Kalliopi Lemos, calm but purposeful, forges ahead into a large workshop beside the railway. Navigating Through a Crisis
  • Key line: ‘A snowy, blowy Christmas, a mistletoey Christmas, a turkey lurkey Christmas to you!’
  • It was a wicked, blowy day, and I crept into a wrecked "camion" and sheltered there, and ate some lunch and slept a little. My War Experiences in Two Continents
  • With the weather being a tad on the blowy side at the moment I've noticed that my skin is starting to feel dry and a little sore.
  • In the first three days we've seen it calm, blowy and wet.
  • That pretty little weatherboard building is today preserved at Old Gippstown, the Gippsland Heritage Park at Moe (rhymes with blowy) near Morwell in Victoria. Parliament
  • Whoa, it's blowy," he said, amazed he could speak. Polly Samson | The Man Who Fell
  • It was very blowy and some of the greens were tricky but I hit the ball fantastically well and missed only four or five greens which is pretty good out there.
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