Yes. The action verb is blew
We should stay the course to capitalize on the trade winds.
No. An example of a compound sentence would be:Rain caused damage along the coast and and heavy winds caused damage inland. (two clauses, each with its own subject and verb.)
driven by hurricane winds, the crashing waves were white with spume.
Africa was so beautiful, I enjoyed it all until the sirocco winds blew in.
carefully & fierce
The palm trees are swaying in the warm summer winds.
The verb in this sentence is "blew." It is showing the action of the strong winds causing the old tree to fall down.
These high winds are whipping my new trees to death!
The high winds are ripping trees right out of the ground. I am ripping these old t-shirts into rags for cleaning.
Yes, trees can be knocked down by 50 mph winds.
Yes, 40 mph winds can potentially knock down trees, especially if the trees are weakened or have shallow roots.
The trees block wind nuff said
A possible sentence may be talking about winds, as in the meteorological term: "The hurricane winds carried north over South Carolina"
The phrase 'soothing as night winds are' is not a sentence; it has no subject; it is not a complete thought.
We should stay the course to capitalize on the trade winds.
We should stay the course to capitalize on the trade winds.
Yes, trees can be knocked down by 20 mph winds, especially if the tree is already weakened or if the soil is saturated.