How To Use Windily In A Sentence
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Cole cares only about making money; Chambers is a self-taught intellectual, windily lecturing his pal on the history of wherever they happen to alight.
Tessa DeCarlo: Ebony and Ivory
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We made it safely to the low wall built by the mujahidin - Basyir and I exhaled windily - and hiked on to the peak, hopping across the ditch once or twice to the ancient boundary wall to look down into West Kabul.
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They argued windily with him, and he was cocky, and enjoyed the spectacle of his interesting martyrdom.
Babbit
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‘It's most closely associated with U.S. President Warren Gamaliel Harding,’ writes Quinion, ‘who used it a lot and who was by all accounts the classic example of somebody who orates verbosely and windily.’
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What do you mean?" asked the midshipman right before his head dropped heavily to the table, his last breath pressing windily out of his lungs.
Archive 2005-05-15
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Sorry sha'el, most of what you write is at least mildly if windily and self-indulgently amusing, but in regards to
Words Fail Me
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From Merriam-Webster: blo·vi·ate: To speak or write verbosely and windily.
Bloviation Without Representation
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Try to write too windily and the end result won't be worth reading.
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I thought that was more or less what I was trying to say, albeit a bit more windily.
Summoning a Hobgoblin
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Howard Marshall II, Anna Nicole's octogenarian billionaire husband, sung by Alan Oke with an appropriate wiry toughness; the four buxom lap dancers who, when Anna Nicole starts working in a sex club, instruct her in the rudiments of their art; or Doctor Yes, the plastic surgeon who created Smith's rack windily sung by Andrew Rees.
Royal Opera's 'Anna Nicole' misses the inner beauty
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You have talked windily about the royal races and the heritage of the earth, and we can only reply that that remains to be seen.
THE UNPARALLELED INVASION
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I felt his harsh beard brush my ear as he whispered to me windily, ‘Beware of Abd el Kader’.
Seven Pillars of Wisdom