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The phrase "head blow" is not commonly used in written English and may not be immediately clear in meaning
It could be used in contexts discussing physical impacts or metaphorical situations where someone is shocked or surprised. Example: "After hearing the unexpected news, it felt like a head blow that left me speechless."
Exact(11)
A head blow can injure or tear olfactory nerves.
While recovering he received an accidental head blow from a child he was coaching.
Following another GB appeal, a second head blow was wiped out.
"Yeah, we'd love to make your head blow up, and they did, and I cried a single tear," she said.
Look, "The Newsroom" was never going to be my favorite series, but I didn't expect it to make my head blow off, all over again, after all these years of peaceful hate-watching.
The Fay report said that this had been an effort to fool Iraqi prisoners and guards, and that the body had been correctly autopsied and the death attributed to the head blow.
Similar(48)
Like most women who have grown up in the western world, I have spent a significant portion of my adult life torturing every single hair on my body, from those on my head (blow-drying, straightening, curling) to those everywhere else (waxing, shaving, plucking, threading).
Another friend got her head blown off.
It doesn't show someone with their head blown off".
Then a man gets his head blown off.
Is the air vent above my head blowing someone's flu into my face?
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com