Draw air into, and expel out of, the lungs.
Heave or utter a sigh; breathe deeply and heavily.
Synonyms
Examples for "breathe "
Examples for "breathe "
1 I stared straight ahead, unable to talk, not yet able to breathe .
2 In case of gas put on the respirator; otherwise breathe out continuously.
3 Designers across Ford had to work together to help this engine breathe .
4 To the nation in general the manifesto would breathe nothing but affection.
5 She couldn't breathe , couldn't think, could only feel-andknow herself utterly content.
1 They respire , merely as a vestigial reflex, but they don't oxygenate anymore.
2 He laughed, and seemed to respire more air into his broad chest.
3 The moment after I began to respire twenty quarts of unmingled nitrous oxide.
4 This enables the lungs to respire non-synchronously with the heart.
5 When a spontaneous effort to respire is observed, proceed to induce Circulation and Warmth.
1 Don't allow him to take a breath before you strike somewhere else.
2 There was a brief hesitation before he heard her take a breath .
3 At the Pacific Station I was ordered to take a breath test.
4 You just have to take a breath , let it out, and squeeze.
5 Somehow she managed to take a breath without audibly gasping, then another.
1 Between pulls he would suspire deeply, so as to get the full assistance of the Climate.
2 She breathed long, gasping breaths and felt something in her suspire that was alien in its comfort.
3 The scene about me suspired like the brilliant and deadly scales of a poisonous reptile.
4 He suspired exhaustively in the still, strong heat, and took possession of the scene with commanding, intolerant eyes.
5 You've been suspiring and then you've wiped your forehead with your dirty hand, the way you say I mustn't.
6 The expression became a war-cry, and the world escaped from the baleful sceptre under whose shadow it had too long suspired .
Grammar, pronunciation and more