I saw none of the answers referenced the relevant legal texts yet, so I decided to write my own.
Yes.
Firstly, you would be allowed to copy the answers to your blog even if they weren't yours.
As the Terms of Service state:
In the event that You post or otherwise use Subscriber Content outside of the Network or Services, with the exception of content entirely created by You, You agree that You will follow the attribution rules of the Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike license as follows:
- You will ensure that any such use of Subscriber Content visually displays or otherwise indicates the source of the Subscriber Content as coming from the Stack Exchange Network. This requirement is satisfied with a discreet text blurb, or some other unobtrusive but clear visual indication.
- You will ensure that any such Internet use of Subscriber Content includes a hyperlink directly to the original question on the source site on the Network (e.g., http://stackoverflow.com/questions/12345)
- You will ensure that any such use of Subscriber Content visually display or otherwise clearly indicate the author names for every question and answer so used.
- You will ensure that any such Internet use of Subscriber Content Hyperlink each author name directly back to his or her user profile page on the source site on the Network (e.g., http://stackoverflow.com/users/12345/username), directly to the Stack Exchange domain, in standard HTML (i.e. not through a Tinyurl or other such indirect hyperlink, form of obfuscation or redirection), without any “nofollow” command or any other such means of avoiding detection by search engines, and visible even with JavaScript disabled.
List changed from a/b/c/d to 1/2/3/4 because SE doesn't support the former
However, in your case you don't even need to follow these rules because, as the cited above, “content entirely created by You” is exempt from them.
Furthermore, although you have granted Stack Exchange a license to your contributions by accepting their ToS, you still retain ownership of the copyright and all neighboring rights to your creation. Also, although you did grant SE a license, nowhere do the Terms state that you've granted them an exclusive license.
Rather the opposite, in fact. That is because, according to those same Terms of Service, not only Stack Exchange users but also Stack Exchange itself is granted the right to use your contributions according to the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike license (CC-BY-SA), which explicitly states:
Subject to the terms and conditions of this License, Licensor hereby grants You a worldwide, royalty-free, non-exclusive, perpetual (for the duration of the applicable copyright) license…
The ToS section linked above also specifies a license that only applies to you and Stack Exchange, and which does not contain the same restrictions (e.g. "Share Alike") that apply to the CC license. This license does not claim exclusivity, either.
That said,
it would nonetheless be wise to indicate that these are your answers which you've re-used from Stack Overflow; otherwise, you'll likely have to deal with angry blog commenters thinking you've taken other people's answers without their permission. Also, be warned that Google does not like certain kinds of duplicate content.