breath

pronunciation

How to pronounce breath in British English: UK [breθ]word uk audio image

How to pronounce breath in American English: US [breθ] word us audio image

  • Noun:
    the process of taking in and expelling air during breathing
    the air that is inhaled and exhaled in respiration
    a short respite
    an indirect suggestion
    a slight movement of the air

Word Origin

breath
breath: [OE] Breath comes ultimately from the Indo-European base *bhrē- ‘burn, heat’ (source also of braise, breed, brood, and probably brawn), and in its original Indo-European form *bhrētos appears to have meant something like the ‘steam, vapour, etc given off by something burning or cooking’. When it reached Old English, via Germanic *brǣthaz, it still meant ‘smell’ or ‘exhalation’, and it was not in fact until as late as the 14th century that this notion of ‘exhalation’ came to be applied to human or animal respiration (the main Old English word for ‘breath’ had been ǣthm, which German still has in the form atem).The verb breathe is 13thcentury.=> braise, brawn, breed, brood
breath (n.)
Old English bræð "odor, scent, stink, exhalation, vapor" (Old English word for "air exhaled from the lungs" was æðm), from Proto-Germanic *bræthaz "smell, exhalation" (cognates: Old High German bradam, German Brodem "breath, steam"), from PIE root *gwhre- "to breathe, smell."

Example

1. Focus on your breath going in and out .
2. He takes a deep breath and waits for an answer .
3. But occasionally he 'd smelled wine on her breath .
4. Hattie would cover her head and gasp for breath .
5. For the cause of revolution , he fought till his last breath .

more: >How to Use "breath" with Example Sentences