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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a windstorm over" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a windstorm occurring in a specific area or affecting a particular location.
Example: "The meteorologist warned of a windstorm over the coastal region, advising residents to take precautions."
Alternatives: "a storm over" or "a tempest over".
Exact(1)
Create a windstorm over good land.
Similar(59)
At Wingate Field six years ago, the rhythm-and-blues singer and composer Curtis Mayfield, best known for the hit title track from the movie "Superfly," severely injured his spine when a windstorm blew over a lighting tower and part of the stage collapsed.
The dead peach tree belonged to an employee at San Diego's Lost Abbey brewery, and the last peaches it bore — before blowing over in a windstorm around 2008 — were used to make that brewery's Yellow Bus.
The essentials: Two strangers, buffeted by a windstorm that has made travel impossible, take refuge in a rural bar presided over by a lecherous barkeep.
A windstorm.
Not even in a windstorm".
Yesterday we had a windstorm.
A village tries to hold its position in a windstorm.
The breeze becomes a windstorm and the leaves start flying.
In 1930, a windstorm blew off the handle.
The critic Lawrence Alloway likened the fluctuating motifs to "a postcard stand in a windstorm".
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com