... sorry to cause any confusion...
'some body' should read 'somebody'!
also, while I am here, 'somebody' is THE SAME as 'someone'!
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English Teacher
as some body said earlier...
'wind' is a noun... eg. The wind is blowing.
'windy' is an adjective... eg. It is a windy day.
... sorry to cause any confusion...
'some body' should read 'somebody'!
also, while I am here, 'somebody' is THE SAME as 'someone'!
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I chose wind, but it maight change according to the context
I chose "wind"
because the sentence starts with there's = there is and the verb is the word blowing in Present Continuous.
Blowing itself also could be considered as a noun, meaning a storm or a blast of wind. In this case "strong" could be the adjective for "blowing".
However, semantically it seems odd!
So, I also voted for "Wind".
Even if "blowing" is a noun, is it correct to say "a blowing"? A countable noun?
Not normally, no, but you may see a-blowing sometimes. A- is a prefix used before the present and occasionally past participles of some verbs to give it a rustic, poetic or archaic feel- it shows that it's incomplete, but with the present participle, this is unnecessary.
windy can't be correct. Because it is adjective. In that sentience we have strong as sentence but we do not have noun at all.
I guess it should be "There's a very strong wind that is blowing" where "that is" can be omitted.