In return, the air pushes back on the object.
The air pushed hard against them, then the earth shook as though a truck were going by.
My point is, any trapped air pushes strongly to get out.
The cold, heavier air pushes down and forces the warm air to move?
Under the right conditions, outside air pushes itself through the water outlet to get into the bottle.
When moving air pushes on the barrier of the sail, it causes the boat to move.
Since forces result from mutual interactions, the air must also be pushing the bird upwards.
The outside air pushed in with all its weight, and there was only thin metal to resist it.
The hot air inside the building pushed up and out, making the ventilator vanes move.
A change is on the way today as colder air pushes in from the north.