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No, it is a verb form, or also an adjective. e.g. The swirling winds blew away the roof.
The word blew is the simple past tense of the verb blow.
I believe that another word for blew up or explode is crash.
Blow!... Ex. "I WILL blow up these balloons tomorrow." will is the key to changing blow from present tense to future tense. (I.e) blew is past tense!
You will see coolant pouring from it and your car will overheat
The predicate in "The wind gently blew her hair back from her face" is, "Blew her hair back from her face"
It's the predicate. The subject would be whoever did it. e.g. Kelly blew her whistle Kelly=subject blew her whistle=predicate
Raoul de Chagny. They first met when Christine's scarf blew away into the water and Raoul went to fetch it for her.
the man blew me away
because a boi waz flying a kite and it waz sooo strong it blew him away and they celebrate it the day it happend
gushed away
It means you were stunned by something, generally in a positive way. If you were amazed at how good a musician was, you might say, "I saw their concert, and they blew me away."
The shutters of the shop clattered when the strong wind blew.
one day, there was a big strong. the wind blew down the tall tree in which the birds lived. the strong wind blew away the baby birds to the other side of the forest. one of them came down near a cave. the other bird landed outside a Rishi's ashram. in the way, the two baby birds got separated
Ali lost his kite because a strong gust of wind suddenly blew it out of his hands and carried it away. He tried to run after it, but the wind was too strong and the kite flew out of reach.
Dust bowl
the gusty blew away my lunch