wind|winded|winding|winds in English

verb

[wɪnd ,waɪnd]

air out, ventilate; blow a wind instrument; make sound by blowing; search out by smell; cause to be out of breath; catch one´s breath

Use "wind|winded|winding|winds" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "wind|winded|winding|winds" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "wind|winded|winding|winds", or refer to the context using the word "wind|winded|winding|winds" in the English Dictionary.

1. However, winds become a greater concern as the wind shifts abeam.

2. You're winded.

3. Thereafter, east-northeasterly winds aloft led to vertical wind shear which weakened Owen.

4. You sound winded.

5. was he winded?

6. There were soft winds and fierce winds. And then there was the dreaded sirocco , the warm wind that blew in from the Sahara.

7. The blow winded me.

8. Noun 1. Antitrades - wind in the upper atmosphere blowing above but in the opposite direction from the trade winds prevailing wind - the predominant wind direction; "the prevailing wind is from the southwest"

9. The hounds winded the fox.

10. Aristotle had aggrandized the wind system beyond Homer to ten winds, but he left it unbalanced.

11. She is really long - winded.

12. He's so impossibly long - winded.

13. From yon twelve-winded sky,

14. He was winded and shaken.

15. He was badly winded and concussed.

16. The hounds had winded the fox.

17. We can calculate the winter wind exposure -- so, which way the winter winds blow across the landscape.

18. Climbing the hill left him winded.

19. We were winded by the steep climb.

20. 13 Hot winds, and the sugary savor of the air! ... The squalling north wind beats against my windows.

21. Weather, 66, 72-78 Scorer, R.S., 1952: Mountain-gap winds; a study of the surface wind in Gibraltar.

22. 6 Hot winds, and the sugary savor of the air! ... The squalling north wind beats against my windows.

23. Winded, Tabitha gasped, a horrible gagging croak.

24. Long-winded, but not without a point.

25. Thermohaline circulation of deep water and wind-driven surface currents combine to form a winding loop called the Global Conveyor Belt.