Blow town In english explanation

The meaning, explanation, definition and origin of the idiom/phrase "blow town", English Idiom Dictionary ( also found in Vietnamese )

author Tonia Thai calendar 2021-06-27 03:06

Meaning of Blow town

Blow town American British informal

To leave a town hastily
 

Due to the importance of business, he blew town in the early morning without even saying goodbye.

We need to blow town now since the boss has deduced that we are the ones who stole the company's package.

James has blown town at midnight to escape from the gangsters' control.

Other phrases about:

love 'em and leave 'em

To seduce and make someone think you're in love with them (the fact is that you're not) then leave them

beat feet

To flee or run

go between the moon and the milkman

To flee overnight, often to avoid creditors

I'm history

I'm leaving

zip along

1. Used when someone or something moves very quickly.

2. Used when one starts moving or leaves promptly.

 

Grammar and Usage of Blow town

Verb Forms

  • blew town
  • blow town
  • blowing town
  • blown town
  • blows town

The verb "blow" should be conjugated according to its tense.
 

error

Report Error

Do you see anything wrong?

Share your idioms

If you are really thankful, what do you do? You share.

Submit An Idiom

Make a Donation!

Help us update and complete more idioms

Donate

TODAY
one hand washes the other (and both wash the face)

Used to indicate that helping each other or working together toward the same goal will have advantages for everyone who is involved

Example:

The relationship between fashion and film is that one hand washes the other and both wash the face.

Join the Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to get the latest updates!

Darkmode