外部链接:    leo英德   dict有道 百度搜索百度 google谷歌 google图片 wiki维基 百度百科百科   

 breathe [brið]   添加此单词到默认生词本
vi. 呼吸, 生存, 低语

vt. 呼吸, 使喘息, 发散, 低声说


  1. His enthusiasm breathed new life into the company.
    他的热情给公司注入了新的生命。
  2. They walked through the forest breathing the scent of pines.
    他们步行穿过森林,呼吸着松树的芳香。
  3. Fish cannot breathe out of water.
    鱼离开水就不能呼吸。


breathe
[ verb ]
  1. draw air into, and expel out of, the lungs

  2. <verb.body> respire suspire take a breath
    I can breathe better when the air is clean
    The patient is respiring
  3. be alive

  4. <verb.stative>
    Every creature that breathes
  5. impart as if by breathing

  6. <verb.possession>
    He breathed new life into the old house
  7. allow the passage of air through

  8. <verb.stative>
    Our new synthetic fabric breathes and is perfect for summer wear
  9. utter or tell

  10. <verb.communication>
    not breathe a word
  11. manifest or evince

  12. <verb.communication>
    She breathes the Christian spirit
  13. take a short break from one's activities in order to relax

  14. <verb.communication>
    catch one's breath rest take a breather
  15. reach full flavor by absorbing air and being let to stand after having been uncorked

  16. <verb.change>
    This rare Bordeaux must be allowed to breathe for at least 2 hours
  17. expel (gases or odors)

  18. <verb.body>
    emit pass off


Breathe \Breathe\, v. t.
1. To inhale and exhale in the process of respiration; to
respire.

To view the light of heaven, and breathe the vital
air. --Dryden.

2. To inject by breathing; to infuse; -- with into.

Able to breathe life into a stone. --Shak.

And the Lord God formed man of the dust of the
ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of
life. --Gen. ii. 7.

3. To emit or utter by the breath; to utter softly; to
whisper; as, to breathe a vow.

He softly breathed thy name. --Dryden.

Or let the church, our mother, breathe her curse,
A mother's curse, on her revolting son. --Shak.

4. To exhale; to emit, as breath; as, the flowers breathe
odors or perfumes.

5. To express; to manifest; to give forth.

Others articles breathe the same severe spirit.
--Milner.

6. To act upon by the breath; to cause to sound by breathing.
``They breathe the flute.'' --Prior.

7. To promote free respiration in; to exercise.

And every man should beat thee. I think thou wast
created for men to breathe themselves upon thee.
--Shak.

8. To suffer to take breath, or recover the natural
breathing; to rest; as, to breathe a horse.

A moment breathed his panting steed. --Sir W.
Scott.

9. To put out of breath; to exhaust.

Mr. Tulkinghorn arrives in his turret room, a little
breathed by the journey up. --Dickens.

10. (Phonetics) To utter without vocality, as the nonvocal
consonants.

The same sound may be pronounces either breathed,
voiced, or whispered. --H. Sweet.

Breathed elements, being already voiceless, remain
unchanged

Note: [in whispering]. --H. Sweet.

{To breathe again}, to take breath; to feel a sense of
relief, as from danger, responsibility, or press of
business.

{To breathe one's last}, to die; to expire.

{To breathe a vein}, to open a vein; to let blood. --Dryden.


Breathe \Breathe\ (br[=e][th]), v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Breathed}
(br[=e][th]d); p. pr. & vb. n. {Breathing}.] [From {Breath}.]
1. To respire; to inhale and exhale air; hence;, to live. ``I
am in health, I breathe.'' --Shak.

Breathes there a man with soul so dead
Who never to himself hath said,
This is my own, my native land! --Sir W. Scott
[The Lay of
the Last
Minstrel].
[1913 Webster +PJC]

2. To take breath; to rest from action.

Well! breathe awhile, and then to it again! --Shak.

3. To pass like breath; noiselessly or gently; to exhale; to
emanate; to blow gently.

The air breathes upon us here most sweetly. --Shak.

There breathes a living fragrance from the shore.
--Byron.

  1. The new Fed chairman didn't breathe a word about his new job to the group.
  2. They can be harmful if people breathe the vapor or dust or come in contact with the substances, he added.
  3. Spence said he gave a razzing to nurses who constantly told him to "breathe through your nose now, and breathe deep."
  4. Spence said he gave a razzing to nurses who constantly told him to "breathe through your nose now, and breathe deep."
  5. Apparently the combination of drugs and the gag made it impossible for him to breathe." Ferris was 25 when he was last seen in 1985.
  6. The bugs are sorted, then shipped within 24 hours in paper cartons that allow the creatures to breathe but keep them from fleeing.
  7. It will be the job of Seifert, who takes over as chief executive in August, to breathe life into the new legal structure. 'This will require pure management skills,' says Breuer.
  8. More solemn types can opt for the "creative whining" or the simple "stand, breathe and smile."
  9. So breathe deeply, and buy - the stories it contains are incredibly evocative as the barbarian west bought, smuggled, begged, and ultimately pillaged Constantinople for its treasures. Daily (not Tuesdays) 10 -22.00; until February 1.
  10. The baby was delivered surgically, weighing more than 11 pounds, unable to breathe and without a heartbeat.
  11. 'The question being asked is what is the company going to do from now on?' Hope was expressed yesterday that Mr Morishita would be able to breathe some fresh air into the company.
  12. Western analysts said Mr. Gorbachev's failure to breathe new intellectual honesty into the country's account of its troubled past signals that he has been thwarted by opponents urging a slower and less radical path to internal reform.
  13. Eliasson, U.N. Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar's special emissary, arrived in Tehran on Monday seeking to breathe new life into peace talks broken off Nov. 11.
  14. So when people breathe carbon monoxide, it cuts down the amount of oxygen in their blood, and high doses are fatal.
  15. President Bush says he is much better, thank you, and so all Washington can breathe a sigh of relief and put William Henry Harrison out of mind.
  16. You can breathe in thoughts of a few days' rest before summer school.
  17. Industry executives believe the soft-drink rivals were seeking to breathe some fresh air into their promotional strategies, to wrest market share from each other amid softer industry growth.
  18. "In Los Angeles, the problem is it's happening way down low where we have to breathe it in amounts exceeding anything we've seen except on Titan," he said, referring to Saturn's smoggy moon.
  19. She can breathe on her own, and at times her eyes are open and move randomly.
  20. "It makes it hard to breathe," said Jesse Mellor, 36, a hospital counselor out for a 6-mile jaunt despite the smog. "I notice my times go down.
  21. In celebrating the lifestyle of the hero-on-horseback, both reel and real, they help breathe renewed life into the myth of California and the Southwest as a cultural frontier.
  22. He kept talking when Housley ordered that he only breathe.
  23. "I could hardly breathe, not only because it was crowded but because of what we heard," says Zeljko Simic, a Milosevic adviser who was with him that night.
  24. Convergence is likened to a corset that has squeezed market enterprise to the point that it can scarcely breathe. Last year profits were down almost across the board and 847 companies applied for protection from their creditors.
  25. "I'm trying to tell her, `No, no, breathe through it,"' he said.
  26. The oxygen is breathed in by humans and animals who breathe out carbon dioxide which is breathed in by the plants and used in photosynthesis which produces more oxygen.
  27. "He was always smoking," said Polhill's wife, Ferial. "He got up in the middle of the night to smoke." Polhill can't smoke anymore, because he no longer can breathe through his nose and mouth.
  28. "I literally quit smoking because of the putrid smoking cars," said Schoenfeld. "We were caged in that smoking car and couldn't breathe.
  29. Proponents in the House are trying to breathe election-year life into "comparable worth," a dangerous idea that eschews market-determined wages.
  30. "We breathe life into the markets we enter," boasts Charles D. Weil, president of ConAgra Frozen Foods, the unit launching Healthy Choice soup.
加入收藏 本地收藏 百度搜藏 QQ书签 美味书签 Google书签 Mister Wong
您正在访问的是
中国词汇量第二的英语词典
更多精彩,登录后发现......
验证码看不清,请点击刷新
  注册