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[ US /ˈbɹiz/ ]
[ UK /bɹˈiːz/ ]
VERB
  1. to proceed quickly and easily
  2. blow gently and lightly
    It breezes most evenings at the shore
NOUN
  1. any undertaking that is easy to do
    marketing this product will be no picnic
  2. a slight wind (usually refreshing)
    the breeze was cooled by the lake
    as he waited he could feel the air on his neck

How To Use breeze In A Sentence

  • I just stayed the dorm to around and shoot the breeze with a couple of friends.
  • The four of us stayed for a couple of nights in the Rest House at Takoradi, which gave us a few hours to walk the beaches and paddle in the ocean, and to luxuriate in the fresh sea breezes after the heavy atmosphere of the interior.
  • There are drifts of feverfew, clouds of philadelphus, grasses whispering in the breeze, and everywhere the perfume of 1,000 blossoms keeping the countryside alive in the heart of London.
  • It was mid autumn and the leaves were already starting to swirl around me as a harsher wind blew, creating almost a curtain of color each time the breeze came.
  • As for bridges, fairground rides, aeroplanes and indeed absurdly altitudinous skyscrapers that move perceptibly in the breeze - not fine. Times, Sunday Times
  • It was really cold, with a sneaky, penetrating breeze to provide an extra wind-chill.
  • A soft breeze pulsed the air
  • She hears nothing but the breeze rustling the curtains of her bedroom window, and the angry blare of the television coming from her father's bedroom.
  • She breezed through the song as though she'd been singing it for years.
  • Rare cinquefoil bloom just inches from the path and marsh grasses waft in the breeze.
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