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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a tiny whiff" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a very small or faint smell or scent that is detected briefly.
Example: "As I walked past the bakery, I caught a tiny whiff of freshly baked bread that made my mouth water."
Alternatives: "a faint hint" or "a slight trace".
Exact(2)
Mr. Mitchell also sings in a voice whose lofty elocution and frosty, slightly inhuman tone echo Mr. Bowie's as spiked with a tiny whiff of helium.
A tiny whiff of Alice In Chains permeates the menacing fog of Gehenna for a few brief moments, but in every other respect this is a classic example of how Slipknot can never be credibly accused of courting mainstream audiences.
Similar(58)
To get a better handle on whether AND and EST are cupid molecules, a team of researchers led by Ivanka Savic Berglund, a neuroscientist at the Centre of Gender-Related Medicine athehe Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden, gave 36 people tiny whiffs of the molecules while scanning their brains with positron emission tomography (PET), which detects increased blood flow.
In fact Berkus, an extremely affable fellow, cannot hide just the tiniest whiff of contempt for the kind of people who can live "with like three things.
But you're beguiled enough to click "play-now", and it's after this that Sense8 starts to get you with a much-needed injection of pace and just the tiniest whiff of clarity.
The tiniest whiff of protest last March prompted the government to outlaw demonstrations.
Though only a tiny glimpse, it does provide a whiff of other Crawford subjects, like the girders of the elevated line in New York and the worn cemetery artifacts of New Orleans.
The buzz which hummed around the opening last year of Sushi Tetsu, a tiny seven-seater off the Clerkenwell Road, had about it the whiff of hyperbole.
The first day of the walkout was more like a tiny gas leak, imperceptible deep into the night, with only the faintest whiff signaling to the sleepless that something was not right.
So they turned the business into an izakaya serving beer and shochu (grain spirit with more than a whiff of poteen about it), and small dishes prepared in a tiny kitchen at one end of the room.
Studies have shown that taking a whiff of peppermint increases your concentration abilities, makes you more alert, and gives you a tiny boost that can make all the difference.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com