About the wind blowing hard: “One of my apple trees was ________ (down).”
BLOWN | 801 |
BLOWED | 134 |
BLEW | 34 |
BLOWN OVER | 28 |
NR | 22 |
UPROOTED | 11 |
KNOCKED | 6 |
BLOW | 4 |
BROKEN | 3 |
TOPPLED | 3 |
BLEW OVER | 2 |
BLOWED OVER | 2 |
BROKE | 2 |
FROZEN | 2 |
KNOCKED OVER | 2 |
BLEW HELL OUT OF THE APPLE TREES | 1 |
BLEW TO PIECES | 1 |
BLEW UP | 1 |
BLOWED DOWN | 1 |
BLOWED UP | 1 |
BLOWED UP BY THE ROOTS | 1 |
BLOWN OUT | 1 |
BLOWN UP | 1 |
BROKE DOWN | 1 |
BROKEN OFF | 1 |
DESTROYED | 1 |
DOWNED | 1 |
OVERBLOWN | 1 |
ROOT UP | 1 |
ROOTED UP | 1 |
THROWN DOWN | 1 |
TIPPED | 1 |
TIPPED OVER | 1 |
TOPPLED OVER | 1 |
TUMBLED | 1 |
TWISTED OFF | 1 |
UPSET | 1 |
WENT DOWN | 1 |
DARE Data Summary by Dictionary of American Regional English (DARE) is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.