8 English Phrasal Verbs With 'BLOW'

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We have definitions for 8 phrasal verbs with 'BLOW'

8 phrasal verbs with 'BLOW'

Blow away

  1. Kill
    (Separable [optional] | International English)
    » Example: He grabbed a gun and BLEW the police officer AWAY.
  2. Beat rivals or competitors by a large margin
    (Separable [optional] | International English)
    » Example: Their new product has BLOWN all the others AWAY.
  3. Impress greatly
    (Separable [obligatory] | International English)
    » Example: Her first novel BLEW me AWAY.
  4. When the wind moves something from a place
    (Intransitive | International English)
    » Example: The flag BLEW AWAY in the storm; we'll have to buy a new one.

Blow down

  1. When the wind forces something to fall
    (Separable [optional] | International English)
    » Example: A tree was BLOWN DOWN in the storm.

Blow in

  1. Arrive, sometimes suddenly or unexpectedly
    (Intransitive | American English)
    » Example: He BLEW IN from Toronto early this morning.

Blow off

  1. Not keep an appointment
    (Separable [obligatory] | American English)
    » Example: We were going to meet last night, but she BLEW me OFF at the last minute.
  2. Ignore, not do something
    (Separable [optional] | American English)
    » Example: I BLEW the homework OFF and did badly.
  3. Expel gas from the anus
    (Intransitive | International English)
    » Example: He BLEW OFF in front of everybody.

Blow out

  1. Extinguish candles, matches, etc.
    (Separable [optional] | International English)
    » Example: She BLEW the candles OUT on her birthday cake.
  2. Defeat decisively
    (Separable [optional] | American English)
    » Example: The Broncos BLEW OUT the Raiders 55-0.

Blow over

  1. When a scandal gets forgotten
    (Intransitive | International English)
    » Example: The scandal BLEW OVER within a fortnight when the press found someone else to attack.

Blow through

  1. Do or consume something very quickly
    (Inseparable | International English)
    » Example: He won £7 million on the lottery last year and he BLEW THROUGH the first million in one week.

Blow up

  1. Explode
    (Separable [optional] | International English)
    » Example: The bomb BLEW UP without any warning.
  2. Inflate
    (Separable [optional] | International English)
    » Example: The pressure was low, so I BLEW the tyre UP.
  3. Enlarge (e.g., photograph).
    (Separable [optional] | International English)
    » Example: BLOW UP that photo so we can see his face.
  4. The beginning of a storm
    (Intransitive | International English)
    » Example: A storm BLEW UP while we were out walking.
  5. Lose your temper, become angry
    (Intransitive | International English)
    » Example: They BLEW UP when they heard what I had done wrong.

Take our Exercise on 'BLOW'

Quiz for Verb: 'To BLOW'

Choose the correct definition for each phrasal verb...

'Blow down' means...

'Blow out' means...

'Blow off' means...

'Blow up' means...

'Blow away' means...

'Blow up' means...

'Blow up' means...

'Blow over' means...

'Blow away' means...

'Blow through' means...

 

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