The difference between Blowy and Windy

When used as adjectives, blowy means windy or breezy, whereas windy means accompanied by wind.


Windy is also noun with the meaning: fart.

check bellow for the other definitions of Blowy and Windy

  1. Blowy as an adjective:

    Windy or breezy.

  2. Blowy as an adjective:

    (of fabric, hair, etc.) Billowy, blowing or waving in the wind.

  3. Blowy as an adjective:

    (of soil) Susceptible to drifting.

  1. Blowy as a noun:

  1. Windy as an adjective:

    Accompanied by wind.

    Examples:

    "It was a long and windy night."

  2. Windy as an adjective:

    Unsheltered and open to the wind.

    Examples:

    "They made love in a windy bus shelter."

  3. Windy as an adjective:

    Empty and lacking substance.

    Examples:

    "They made windy promises they would not keep."

  4. Windy as an adjective:

    Long-winded; orally verbose.

  5. Windy as an adjective:

    Flatulent.

    Examples:

    "The [[Tex-Mex]] meal had made them somewhat windy."

  6. Windy as an adjective (slang):

    Nervous, frightened.

  1. Windy as a noun (colloquial):

    fart

  1. Windy as an adjective (of a path etc):

    Having many bends; winding, twisting or tortuous.

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