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"faint air" is correct and usable in written English
It is often used when talking about smells or odors, if something has a faint or weak smell. Example: I took a deep breath, and could smell the faint air of vanilla.
Exact(35)
Footsteps echo through the corridors; and the faint air of school gymnasium is difficult to suppress.
Yet, haunting as Shepard's play is, a faint air of portentous reverence overhangs Scott Elliott's production.
A faint air of hopelessness overcomes McWhorter as our conversation winds down.
Run Restaurant has a faint air of a Krishna Consciousness love feast circa 1968.
I learned it in Mexico, and Spanish-speakers from elsewhere laughed at my faint air of officiousness.
The pilot, a fourth-generation New Zealander who has the faint air of a World World II R.A.F.
Similar(25)
The film festival blasts away beneath us; Bandele clutches his coffee with the faintest air of desperation.
Maybe it will even exude that faint aura of salt air that brings a Proustian rush of summers past.
Like Havana, Palermo has the faint, heady air of isolation and rotting elegance.
We love Ford for his slow, sly grin and his easy loping; for his faint, distrait air of not wanting to be there.
Brooke Graham, a reporter for the American station KUTV, fainted on air in January during a live interview about cross-country skiing in Utah.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com