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Full-blown in a sentence

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Sentence count:62+1 Only show simple sentencesPosted:2017-04-10Updated:2020-07-24
Similar words: gallbladderblowblownblow outblown upblow-upblowupblow upMeaning: adj. 1. fully ripe; at the height of bloom 2. having or displaying all the characteristics necessary for completeness. 
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1. Once you are injected you will—sooner or later—develop full-blown AIDS.
2. The border dispute turned into a full-blown crisis.
3. The fighting may develop into a full-blown war.
4. He developed full-blown Aids five years after contracting HIV.
5. Don had full-blown AIDS for over a year before he died.
6. The drop in shares could develop into a full-blown crisis.
7. Before becoming a full-blown director, he worked as the film editor on Citizen Kane.
8. A housewife soul must metamorphose into a full-blown housewife.
9. Fortunately, full-blown flu epidemics are relatively rare.
10. The prospect of a full-blown auction for Cogeco is dim, given that Messrs.
11. Handy rejects a full-blown version of this vision on the grounds that such a divergent society would be very unstable.
12. As in any full-blown controversy, these polarised positions were the ones taken up by most contributors to the fight.
13. But doctors predicted that her chance of developing full-blown diabetes in the next five years was at least 1 in 4.
14. When full-blown free trade eventually comes, the Windwards will be on a very sticky wicket.
15. They may succeed in turning a little local difficulty into a full-blown regional conflagration.
16. They vary from a brief head nod or sagging of the body to a full-blown fall with injury.
17. It's more powerful than the regular injection models,[sentencedict.com] but not quite as powerful as the full-blown turbos.
18. Others again, such as physics, chemistry or history, have important professional associations or societies without being full-blown professions.
19. The Allies, however, had no intention of letting the armistice arrangements slide by default into a full-blown peace.
20. Ginsburg has seen the Super Bowl transformed from a football game in 1967 to a full-blown media spectacle today.
21. The welfare state and the managed economy did not suddenly emerge full-blown in this period.
22. This area is always full of interest: mime artists, solo guitarists and full-blown jazz bands entertain the passing public.
22. Sentencedict.com try its best to collect and create good sentences.
23. What began as a serious oil spill has become a full-blown environmental disaster.
24. By restricting the power of the elected government, the president hopes to prevent problems from erupting into full-blown crises.
25. Taken to extremes, what begins as an anxiety may develop into a full-blown phobia, crippling the life of the sufferer.
26. Their recently acquired understanding very often prevents them from achieving a full-blown panic attack.
27. Are we delicate mistletoe, paying lip service to the green theme, or full-blown Lincoln green?
28. Now, however, they are being formally recognised as mild, but genuine, variations of full-blown psychosis.
29. Mixing it with water, wind, and memory, I reconstitute the desiccated fact as a full-blown experience pulsing with life.
30. Or, given the complexities of the issue and the importance, the suit could be held over for a full-blown review.
More similar words: gallbladderblowblownblow outblown upblow-upblowupblow upblow offblowingblow overwhistleblowerblow the whistlefullfullyin fulltake the bull by the hornsawfullycarefullyfull-timebe full ofjoyfullyruefullyfull moonfull timefull-grownto the fullbalefullyhopefullymindfully
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