Sentence examples for fizz from inspiring English sources

'fizz' is correct and usable in written English.
It is used informally to describe a sound (like a light popping sound) or as a term for a bubbly drink like soda or champagne. Example sentence: The champagne bottle popped with a loud fizz.

Dictionary

fizz

noun

An emission of a rapid stream of bubbles.

  • I poured a cola and waited for the fizz to settle down before topping off the glass.

Exact(60)

Perhaps it's his youthful manner, the way Boyle seems to fizz with energy when he speaks, dressing like a thirtysomething – and sufficiently trim to get away with it – but the word that comes to mind when meeting him is one rarely applied to a man in middle age.

It seems a long time now since the modernising Gove of opposition would perch tieless on the Late Review sofa, and fizz about every novel or film, so long as it was not too downbeat or dark.

As the Sovetsky Sport columnist Yury Tsyban put it, if Hiddink's side produced champagne football, Capello's style is more of whisky: there may not be much in the way of fizz but there is a peaty robustness to it.

The graphics are a fizz of shots of Huntsman surrounded by press photographers, looking busy and besieged and at the centre of the action.

As I sat reading in bed, I heard the solitary pop of an early firework and had a momentary pang for familiar faces and a glass of fizz.

Muttiah Muralitharan, a Sri Lankan whose 800 Test wickets may never be exceeded, imparts fizz on the ball, in part, due to a congenital arm defect.

A victory for Mr Campos would be a big upset; a strong second place would gain him a national profile and position him well for 2018.A creditable showing by the national team in the football World Cup in June and July, three months before the election, would add some fizz to Ms Rousseff's campaign, though the extent to which soccer success translates into votes is questionable.

He threw himself into that struggle, touring the American South with his daughter Penny, a much-jailed student activist who had cut her teeth in a campaign to desegregate a skating rink in Pennsylvania.But by the early 1970s, the "fizz had gone out of the booze".

The cocktail was given added fizz by American pressure to revalue the yen: in response to a rising currency, the Bank of Japan (BoJ) cut interest rates, flooding the economy with cheap cash.

This makes the void fizz with activity, as particles and their antimatter counterparts zip in and out of existence.

Chancellor Gerhard Schröder hopes that the cuts, which should prune the average worker's tax bill by 10%, will help to fizz up the economy.

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