Dictionary
the windblown
adjective
Growing in a distorted shape produced by the prevailing winds
Exact(60)
Jacksonville (7-8) outplayed Cincinnati most of the windblown day.
As Mr. Trump stands on the windblown Scottish coast, he asks for a mirror.
When the windblown water runs up against land, the water piles up and flows inland.
My skis skittered over the windblown ice, sliding instead of carving.
Golmud, itself a modern city rising from the windblown flats of the Qaidam Basin, is a railway terminus.
The character actor with the windblown hair and hound-dog face sat on the roof deck of….
The wind blows every which way in the world, and Voltaire's last word to the windblown remains the right one.
The congregation and some of its non-Mormon neighbors still use the windblown lot to grow vegetables, train Cub Scouts and host family barbecues.
The windblown sand accumulated, in the postglacial period, up to a height of 45 feet (15 metres) above the flat marshes and moors of the Bremer Becken (lowlands).
People getting rid of their cats abandoned them at Plumb Beach and a feral-cat population spread through the windblown foliage.
Scientists have long tracked these distinctive waves, finding them on the windblown sea, on sand dunes, among clouds and even in the churning gases of Saturn and Jupiter.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com