More windy or blustery; having more wind or air movement than something else.
Comparative form of 'blowy' (resembling wind or exposed to wind), from 'blow' + '-ier' suffix. Emerges from informal English weather descriptions.
This is the kind of word you'd hear British people use on weather forecasts—very specific for describing those irritating days when it's not quite stormy but you can't keep your hair in place!
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