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were blown far
verb
To produce an air current.
Exact(1)
These saga accounts relate how the Icelanders encountered a severe storm and were blown far off course before being forced to make landfall in the Hebrides.
Similar(58)
A new kind of composite boardwalk fared well, but much of the wooden boardwalk was blown far from the beach.
I will reveal no more, except to say that his mind was blown far more violently off course than his vessel.
Ten of the "gentleman rovers" pulled out before the start and the ship was blown far off course by storms, making an unplanned first landfall at Bermuda.
However, while setting sail for mainland Korea with a crew of 43 Koreans, Choe's ship was blown far off course during a violent storm that lasted 14 days, his ship aimlessly drifting off towards China until reaching the Chinese coast off of Taizhou, Zhejiang, near Ningbo.
But the climate-control system required a little patience, as the "auto" settings invariably seemed to be blowing far too much air into the cabin or none at all.
But firefighters were concerned, in part because the flames were spewing burning chunks of wood thousands of feet into the air, where they were blown as far as a mile and starting new fires.
He paced off how far they were blown by the explosion, and calculated the yield as ten kilotons of TNT; the actual yield was about 18.6 kilotons.
So far, he said, 118 huts were blown away and 26 were partly damaged.
The Daily News, by far Zimbabwe's best newspaper until its presses were blown up in 2001, may revive soon.
Gnat, or midges breed in water but may be blown pretty far inland.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com