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The phrase "a very windy" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe weather conditions, particularly when emphasizing the strength of the wind.
Example: "It was a very windy day at the beach, making it difficult to fly kites."
Alternatives: "extremely windy" or "quite windy".
Exact(29)
"It was a very windy day".
After a very windy Thursday and Friday, today's conditions were the calmest of the tournament.
Richard Stanton says, "I'm in a very windy Sydney, stuck at work.
John Archdeacon: Ok, I'm in a caravan with a very windy wind making said caravan sway, a very windy baby refusing to sleep and without the half bottle of wine i just found I'd be close to breaking point.
Andy, Bob and Chuck arrive at the seventh green on a very windy day of their club championship.
"Anybody who's ever stood out at the dock in Weehawken waiting for a ferry just knows it's a very windy area," Mr. Baroni said.
Similar(31)
Although the Met Office confirmed the storm had moved on to the North Sea, a spokesperson said a spell of "very windy weather is likely".
The first is if a site is very windy, windy enough to blow an unrooted plant out of the soil.
The Met Office said: "The remains of Hurricane Katia are expected to come across the UK on Monday bringing a spell of very windy weather.
Orestad sits on a plain and is very windy; additionally, in Scandinavia the sun is low in the sky for much of the year and Orestad's high buildings create shadows.
"It was a lot of unforced errors, very windy conditions.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com