[
UK
/wˈɪndbləʊn/
]
ADJECTIVE
- used especially of trees; growing in a shape determined by the prevailing winds
How To Use windblown In A Sentence
- He reached out and touched her face gently, a windblown strand of hair curling around his finger.
- They string hundreds of meters of flexible fencing to catch windblown flurries.
- He was inside, a too big figure, like a windblown tree come into her home. COUP D'ETAT
- Seeming a lonely remnant of his dying breed, Brown's sloe-eyed, densely painted Buffalo in Golden Gate Park stands gazing blankly at the viewer beneath a solitary windblown pine.
- This vast mountainous region is crossed by just two roads which wind their way up to high, windblown passes.
- Such darkly shadowed taluses under an open, light-filled firmament just waiting to ravenously warm every windblown, cascading, double-trunked forest shrub and errant piece of fossilized driftwood on the esker. Sunday Salon: The Cover of J.M. Coetzee’s Dusklands
- I was flushed by the time I pushed heavily through the doors of the library, and my windblown hair was in twists and tangles, not that my appearance bothered me tonight as it rarely ever did.
- Her fingers worked deep into his windblown curls as her face lifted, appealing for his kiss.
- With their unkempt, windblown hair, they almost resembled the man beneath her.
- Its salt became a layer of rock salt, called evaporite, which was then buried by windblown sediment. Lockergnome