Yes, "blossoms blown away" can be considered a metaphor. It often symbolizes the fleeting nature of beauty or life, suggesting that something precious can be easily lost or removed. The imagery evokes a sense of transience and the inevitability of change, making it a powerful metaphor for various emotional or existential themes.
Wind blown sand will, over time, tear away at the wood of a telephone pole.
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White Blossoms - 2010 was released on: USA: 10 September 2010
She was blown away by it. Polonius was her father, and she had relied on him almost totally to tell her what to do.
A metaphor
I Was Blown Away was created in 1995.
Blown over, blown down, yes, but not blown away.
I was blown away
No. It's a simile If it had said,"...the scent was a soft and tender embrace," then it would be a metaphor. A simile says the thing is similar to another. A metaphor says they are the same thing. The word "like" is a dead giveaway that it's a simile.
Blown Away - album - was created on 2012-05-01.
Anything can be blown away in winds if it is not built strong enough to withstand. So yes, A house, barn, fence, ect. could be blown away during the Dust Bowl. Especially if it was older, siding and roofing could have blown away as well. *Answer By Sno*
Carrie Underwood
Most of the time if they have enough water and if the blossoms aren't blown off before they mature to apples.
"The police helicopters were rising so far away that it seemed someone had blown the gray off a dry dandelion flower."
Dr. Hook's song, "Blown Away" is on the album, "Rising", released in 1980.
The cast of Blown Away - 2005 includes: Steve Arrowsmith Nicola Bailey Jess Wright
You say, "We rented" which is past tense, then state "you are blown away", which is present tense.The correct way is, We rented all the Star Trek movies & were blown away by the special effects.