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The phrase "a windblown" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe something that has been affected by the wind, often conveying a sense of dishevelment or movement caused by the wind.
Example: "She stepped out into the storm, her hair a wild, windblown mess."
Alternatives: "wind-swept" or "wind-tossed".
Exact(60)
slider that dipped like a windblown leaf.
Another shows the jaunty slant of a windblown barn.
But we kept climbing, skinning up a rounded spine with a windblown ice crust.
The Blue Jays' only hit off Vazquez on Saturday was a windblown triple by Orlando Hudson.
"Capital en Movimiento" the city declares itself, next to a windblown drawing of its main landmark, the Angel of Independence.
The dancers' clothes billowed in the wind, and the choreography, credited to Mr. Riener, incorporated a windblown quality.
Unhittable one start and uncontrollable the next, the Hughes fastball had been as fickle as a windblown paper airplane.
It leads to a 60-foot boat, made of bamboo, floating on a windblown "sea" of bamboo leaves.
So is a humorous picture of a man at the track grappling with a windblown newspaper (probably Racing Form).
"I fucking loved it," Kristen Stewart tells me when we meet under the flapping canvas of a windblown beach bar.
It was impressive stuff on a windblown day but such performances are becoming the norm for Schwartzel.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com