English, asked by thakurharshpalsingh, 4 months ago

the train started the guard blew his whistle (combi


bn the sentence with as soon as)​

Answers

Answered by bibhachaudhary706
2

Answer:

Please look at category 12 to see if the expression you are looking for is shown under another headword.

1 verb When a wind or breeze blows, the air moves.

We woke to find a gale blowing outside. V

2 verb If the wind blows something somewhere or if it blows there, the wind moves it there.

Strong winds blew away most of the dust... V n with adv

Her cap fell off in the street and blew away... V adv/prep

The bushes and trees were blowing in the wind. V, Also V n prep

3 verb If you blow , you send out a stream of air from your mouth.

Danny rubbed his arms and blew on his fingers to warm them... V prep/adv

Take a deep breath and blow. V

4 verb If you blow something somewhere, you move it by sending out a stream of air from your mouth.

He picked up his mug and blew off the steam. V n with adv, Also V n prep

5 verb If you blow bubbles or smoke rings, you make them by blowing air out of your mouth through liquid or smoke.

He blew a ring of blue smoke. V n

6 verb When a whistle or horn blows or someone blows it, they make a sound by blowing into it.

The whistle blew and the train slid forward... V

A guard was blowing his whistle. V n

7 verb When you blow your nose, you force air out of it through your nostrils in order to clear it.

He took out a handkerchief and blew his nose. V n

8 verb To blow something out, off, or away means to remove or destroy it violently with an explosion.

The can exploded, wrecking the kitchen and bathroom and blowing out windows... V n with adv

Rival gunmen blew the city to bits. V n prep

9 verb If you say that something blows an event, situation, or argument into a particular extreme state, especially an uncertain or unpleasant state, you mean that it causes it to be in that state.

Someone took an inappropriate use of words on my part and tried to blow it into a major controversy. V n prep

10 verb If you blow a large amount of money, you spend it quickly on luxuries.

INFORMAL My brother lent me some money and I went and blew the lot. V n

11 verb If you blow a chance or attempt to do something, you make a mistake which wastes the chance or causes the attempt to fail.

INFORMAL He has almost certainly blown his chance of touring India this winter. V n

...the high-risk world of real estate, where one careless word could blow a whole deal... V n

Oh you fool! You've blo

Explanation:

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