Blow is an irregular verb.
The past tense is blew. The past participle is blown.
The verb for "wind" can be "to gust," "to blow," or "to whip."
No. Blown is an adjective.A verb would be blow. As in "to blow". Or blew as in "he blew".A verb is a word that describes an action (run, walk, etc), a state of being (exist, stand, etc) or occurrence (happen, become, etc).An adjective is a word that describes a noun (the car is blue / it was a cold day / etc).
The word blew is the simple past tense of the verb blow.
The onomatopoeia of blow is "poof".
Blow. Example: The bomb will eventually blow. The wind will blow tomorrow. It is blow for both present and future tense. Unlike past tense-- the wind has blown down my house.
Yes. Blow is an irregular verb.
The word blow is an irregular verb. It can also be a noun.
The simple past tense of the verb "blow" is "blew."
Yes it's an irregular verb.
Yes, it's the present participle of the verb blow.
The verb for "wind" can be "to gust," "to blow," or "to whip."
No. Blow is a verb, or a noun (a punch or impact). It cannot be a preposition.
The verb is "blew".It is the irregular past tense of the verb "blow".
The word "blow" is an irregular verb. It does not follow the typical pattern of adding "-ed" to form its past tense ("blew" instead of "blowed") and past participle ("blown" instead of "blowed").
You may use the verb 'fuku,' meaning 'to blow.' (As in, the wind blows).
To make To fly To need To blow
To make To fly To need To blow