blue
A sentence with the word 'blew' could be 'I watched as the kite blew in the wind.'
The predicate in "The wind gently blew her hair back from her face" is, "Blew her hair back from her face"
The wind blew my coat out of my hands.
No. Blew is a verb. An adverb is basically like an adjective for a verb.
blue
because freiza (not sure if that's how you spell it) blew up their planet when he had no further use for them. This happen when they were revolting against him.
The homophone of "blew" is "blue." "Blew" is the past tense of "blow," while "blue" refers to a color.
You blew it means you failed.
The wind blew down that old tree. He blew out the candles on the cake.
Although the noun is explosion, there is no verb explose.EXPLODED - blew upEXPOSED - revealed, or uncovered
The likely word is burst (blew up, exploded, popped).The similar verb forms are imbursed/reimbursed (paid) and disbursed (paid, gave out).
turn over a new leafI really blew that one!few and far betweentime flew by
"BLEW" AS IN THE SONG "RUNAWAY TRAIN CAME DOWN THE TRACK AND SHE BLEW" pre-dates any breathalyzer connection. Surely, it means the (train) boiler blew...
Awnswer : blew it mean ruining . grammar example ; i really blew it !!!
The homonyms of "blew" are "blue" and "blew" (past tense of "blow").
The cast of As He Blew He Blew - 1915 includes: Harry La Pearl as Homeless Harry