Dictionary
breathes
verb
Third person singular of breathe
Exact(57)
Before counting the breath, the practitioner breathes in through the nostrils and breathes out through the mouth a couple of times.
At birth the human embryo, which is hot, breathes in cooling air just as the central fire draws in cooling breath from the unlimited.
The release of Warren's book, A Fighting Chance, breathes new life – or at least bookstore Q&A opportunities and TV interviews – into presidential speculation.
But then, in the next breath, he says he never feels weighed down by gravity when he walks down the street, that he reads the Bible and the spirit breathes life into him, that he has a recurring dream where he has a gold crown, and he's sitting under a tree, with a lion under one arm and a lioness under the other.
Apart from that my main training place is Lee Valley but the issue with that, especially in the summer, is that there's a sewage treatment plant which can make the recovery breathes quite nasty, to say the least!
But it lives and breathes through Hopkins and Mirren.
The press, though it breathes a bit more freely, is co-opted and still occasionally muzzled.
The patient breathes into the device for two minutes and an absorbent trap captures volatile organic compounds (VOCs), which are found in the bloodstream and pass into the breath in minute quantities.
Similar(3)
I could not breathe.
Meanwhile Mrs Prada – the living, breathing personification of the word zeitgeist – sent out invitations to view her new collections (notice the plural).
The typical wheeze in asthma is a continuous whistling sound heard on breathing out.
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