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Ann225 Posted 7 years ago
Grammar

Blow out

Hi,

When you hang out the laundry and it’s windy, can you say that the wind’ll ‘blow it out’, meaning that it’ll makes it easier for the laundry to dry?

I’m not sure if ‘blow out’ is the right phrase to use though.

Thank you.

  

Top answer

Ann225 ‘blow it out’ This doesn't say much to me in terms of laundry. — Blow out the candles on your birthday cake! (The child tries.

  • Ann225 ‘blow it out’ This doesn't say much to me in terms of laundry.
  • — Blow out the candles on your birthday cake!
  • (The child tries.
  • ) — There's one left.
  • Blow it out!
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1 Answers
0
Ann225‘blow it out’

This doesn't say much to me in terms of laundry.

— Blow out the candles on your birthday cake!
(The child tries. One candle doesn't go out.)
— There's one left. Blow it out!


I can imagine hearing something like this:

I'm glad there's a good breeze today. I won't have to wait as long as

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