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The phrase "having blown" is correct and usable in written English.
It is usually used in the past participle form "having blown" to show an action that has already taken place. For example: "Having blown the whistle, the referee signaled the end of the game."
Exact(53)
Love fell apart, having blown their money and their minds.
Having blown his own flying career because of a night-vision problem, Lieut.
She claims to be unbothered by having blown a fortune in gambling dens around the world.
Both women are stranded, having blown up their old lives and failed to find new ones.
All this, despite having blown away a large chunk of his life with drugs and alcohol.
But the damage was done, and Costello slunk back to England, having blown a shot at being the next Bowie.
And then the dreaded wind that takes all breath away was gone, having blown itself to bits.
He is now penniless and steeped in debt, having blown his and his family's cash through compulsive gambling.
Similar(3)
Also, you have to be a real shoe freak to care about having blown-up prints on your outfit.
Jack Armstrong, having reported his employer to the financial authorities, is fired for having blown the whistle.
Having blown his own cover, though, Douglass was no longer safe.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com