[
US
/ˈdɹɪzəɫ/
]
[ UK /dɹˈɪzəl/ ]
[ UK /dɹˈɪzəl/ ]
NOUN
- very light rain; stronger than mist but less than a shower
VERB
-
moisten with fine drops
drizzle the meat with melted butter -
rain lightly
When it drizzles in summer, hiking can be pleasant
How To Use drizzle In A Sentence
- Place in a shallow dish and squeeze over lemon juice, then drizzle over oil.
- I don't mind when it rains but I hate that thin film drizzle that seems only to be in the air but manages to soak you in next to no time.
- She climbed into the jungle gym for the drizzle had quickly changed into a large thunder storm.
- Tomorrow will be cloudy with outbreaks of rain and drizzle.
- But, more likely, he has decided it is less of a PR risk to leave a journalist eating a solitary crab pasty in the drizzle than to be trapped alone with her and - God forbid - a tongue-loosening bottle of wine.
- Drizzle with extra virgin olive oil and bouillabaisse.
- Then slowly drizzle in the chicken bouillon and onions and blend. The 8-Week Cholesterol Cure
- Froth sauce using a hand-held immersion blender and drizzle foam atop ravioli.
- Carefully ladle the soup into four bowls and drizzle each bowl with mint oil, below. Times, Sunday Times
- Drizzle 1 tsp of runny honey over it. Times, Sunday Times