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  1. 21 sty 2021 · There’s a wind blowing through here tonight. That's just the way we say it. One might also say, "There's wind blowing through here tonight." Or "The wind is blowing through here tonight." I don't think one is more correct than the other. Let's discuss which would be more likely to be used when.

  2. 27 sty 2016 · 11.5k 15 49 98. 1. It's just a metaphorical twist on leaves being blown around randomly by gusts of wind. More poetic than singing about Brownian motion. – FumbleFingers. Jan 27, 2016 at 2:13. Thank you for the explanation, @FumbleFingers. I haven't as yet thought that blowing in the wind could be the same as being blown by the wind.

  3. 26 lis 2017 · The wind is blowing hard in my back. You need in there because the preposition in in English is used to describe the movement of something in a particular direction. Though, some might say that the preposition into would be, technically speaking, a better choice according to grammar books, but in real speech you will hear people say in all the time in situations like this one.

  4. 5 maj 2015 · Hair that is moved about by the wind is said to be "blowing in the wind". Photographers often employ fans to give a model's hair a "wind-blown look". Clothes hanging on a line do indeed wave in a wind, or even flap (fold in and out, making a slapping, snapping or whipping sound.) These degrees all fall under the description of "blowing in the ...

  5. 26 sty 2015 · 5. The word ‘due’ in this context would means a person or thing was traveling in the direction indicated. So a person traveling to the north from the south is heading due north, and a wind blowing due north is blowing from south to north. Normally, winds are named for the direction they come from. So a north wind is blowing from north to ...

  6. 15 sty 2021 · Donka Minkova says 'the pair wind - wind is a special case, probably best explained on the grounds of homophony avoidance'. Jeremy Smith says that this is a sporadic instance of HL where it failed. He goes on to say '[t]his distinction may be the result of a disambiguating choice between variant pronunciations to avoid confusion between two meanings'

  7. 27 lip 2021 · When you are describing the wind that was blowing when you left home, can you say this? As I left home, the wind was blowing hard. I wasn't sure if you can use past continuous tense in the main clause when the dependent clause begins with "as." So I looked in the dictionaries and couldn't find any sentences like that.

  8. 13 lip 2018 · The reason "finger in the wind" is associated with this is because of people holding their finger in the wind to gauge the direction the wind is blowing. In relation to politics, this is often associated with politicians who are unsure of their own decisions and strive to make the decision that will please voters the most, rather then deciding ...

  9. 8 sie 2015 · When the wind blows, it means that it moves. When something blows, it means that it is moved by the wind. The sentence "There's fog blowing across the mountain peak" means that there's fog moving with the wind from one side to the other side of the mountain peak. Yes, it means that the wind is lightly carrying the fog across the mountain peak.

  10. 19 kwi 2019 · The flag flapped violently in the wind. This is certainly grammatical and idiomatic. The flag flapped violently under the wind. While this is grammatical, it doesn't sound entirely right. As it stands, it has a strange interpretation of the flag being spatially underneath an air current that disturbs the air above it.

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