breathing room

NOUN
  1. sufficient room for easy breathing or movement
    moved to the country to find breathing room
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How To Use breathing room In A Sentence

  • The editing is arrhythmic - it somehow feels cut all wrong, like there's no breathing room.
  • Give yourself the breathing room necessary to feel your deepest longings and desires.
  • Yankee bats will tag pedro and that should give Andy some breathing room. NY Daily News
  • Upon retiring from the book business in 1998 after forty-eight years, he began work on the fluent autumnal poems that would eventually constellate into Breathing Room, several of which first appeared in The Atlantic. A Life's Work
  • The crowd was packed in the venue, providing little breathing room between what were probably 75% muscley, sweaty, young men, loudly announcing their anticipation for the girls to get on stage. Ben Bromberg: Robyn and Kelis' All Hearts Tour Packs Webster Hall With Smoke Machines And Electropop
  • moved to the country to find breathing room
  • You need some breathing room, but you don't want to totally ditch Lindsay.
  • And even if a professor's speech is not precisely within the topic of the class, my organization, the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, has long argued that academic freedom doesn't mean very much if it fails to provide some breathing room around the "germaneness" requirement. Greg Lukianoff: UC Santa Barbara Investigates Professor for Anti-Israel E-Mail
  • This deal should give the company some extra breathing room before its loans are due.
  • The fact a smaller border crossing remains open in the southwest is a sign that Pakistan is giving the U.S. and NATO some breathing room, he said. Pakistan-NATO Supply Standoff: No End In Sight
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