English

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Etymology

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From in +‎ blown.

Adjective

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inblown (not comparable)

  1. Blown in or into.
    • 1953, Philip Warsaw, Genesis, Mother of Sciences: An Exposition, page 220:
      And the capsule's texture yielded to inflate in as correlative ratio to the maximal limit of "i" that the inblown "kh" ( and "m" ) could extort from such texture; and the trio of which equalized a given buoyantly expansion, halted only by that incorporal "i" the textural tenacity would not yield.
    • 2014, Advances in Agronomy - Volume 127, page 82:
      Inblown organic debris will also gradually add substrate for saprophagous food chains.
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