I think you mean billowing.The sheets are billowing in the wind.The smoke is billowing from the chimney.
"dark billowing clouds" isn't a sentence. Dark and billowing are adjectives describing clouds, a plural noun.
Just use it! Or do you mean, can you use the word beheld in a sentence.
How do you use the word decibel in a sentence?What is decibel used for?
the word rag in a sentence
The bedsheets on the clothesline are billowing in the wind.
the flag was BILLOWING in the breeze. hope this helps!
My coat billowed in the wind.
I think you mean billowing.The sheets are billowing in the wind.The smoke is billowing from the chimney.
"dark billowing clouds" isn't a sentence. Dark and billowing are adjectives describing clouds, a plural noun.
Puffs of dark smokes came billowing from the factory's smokestacks.
Example sentences:A plume of smoke was billowing from the campfire. (verb)The billowing clouds drifted over the horizon. (adjective)
We hoisted the flag and watched it billowing in the wind. She walked along the seashore with her long, white dress billowing in the breeze.
No, "billowing" is not an adverb. It is a verb form used to describe how something appears to be moving in a flowing or undulating manner, such as "the smoke billowing from the chimney."
Billowing is the present participle of the verb billow. It can be used with an auxiliary verb to create the progressive (continuous) tenses. Thick smoke is billowing from the building.Billowing can be used as an adjective, as well. Billowingsmoke filled the sky.
The flames quickly engulfed the building, sending thick black smoke billowing into the sky.
The word 'billowing' is the present participle of the verb to billow. The present participle of a verb is also an adjective and a verbal noun called a gerund. The noun billowing, like most gerunds, is a non-count noun, it doesn't have a plural.