Dictionary
to blown
verb
To produce an air current.
Exact(11)
Then it went to blown glass and interiors and objects of art.
Early in 2003, more special-teams gaffes led to blown late leads against the Dallas Cowboys and the Eagles.
The rear five-megapixel camera consistently over or under exposes photos leading to blown out or too dark shots, which also lack detail.
But for the last three weeks, the Hawks have resembled the '69 Cubs, as ill-timed slip-ups have led to blown leads, lost games and contagious self-doubt.
A few years later, a book called "The Boys From New Jersey," by Robert Rudolph, would detail exactly how the government's case went from slam dunk to blown layup.
But while Mr. Wilmarth and other artists of his generation "were all mostly working with industrial glass," Ms. Smith said that early in her career she was drawn to blown and solid glass, which at the time — the mid-1980s — sufromed from what she called "a tremendous cultural bias since this type of work was considered craft and really dismissed".
Similar(44)
He began to blow.
To blow stuff up.
Sure to blow up.
To blow it up.
It's going to blow out".
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