Mr.Radley
Calpurnia considered Mr. Radley, Arthur "Boo" Radley's father, to be "the meanest man God ever blew breath into" in "To Kill a Mockingbird" by Harper Lee.
Calpurnia said that Mr. Radley was the meanest man in Maycomb.
A homophone for a heavy release of breath is "sigh" and "sigh."
an abo blew his horn and they ran in Horror from the dreamtime breath.
Calpurnia was referring to Bob Ewell, the father of Mayella Ewell, in Harper Lee's novel "To Kill a Mockingbird". Bob Ewell is portrayed as a cruel and racist character who causes harm to others in the story.
It Means She Passed The Test. And Be Smarter. It is more colloquial for "She blew it" to mean she failed rather than passed. But if this is a breath alcohol test we are talking about, "she blew the test" means she took the test.
In police 'slang' it refers to the act of blowing into the Breathalyzer to collect a sample of your exhaled breath of alcohol analysis (i.e.- He "blew" a point one oh.")
. The porch furniture was blown clear off the porch; the two swings that hung from the porch ceiling of the porch were scattered more than 100 yards away into the vegetable garden near the smoke house
This is a personification: "The wind blew a gush of wind into the forest out of breath from a day of work." A personification is just saying that nature is doing something a human does.
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.
Blew is correct.