exhale
verb
No English definition recorded for this entry.
L331652 on Wikidata ↗Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ˌɛksˈheɪ̯l/ / [ˌɛksˈheɪ̯l] / /ɪɡˈzeɪ̯l/
noun
Etymology: From Middle French exhaler, from Latin exhalare, from ex (“out”) + halare (“to breathe”).
- An exhalation.
“Now have client take slower, normal breaths through the nose and notice how the abdomen moves slightly outward with each inhale and then deflates with each exhale.”
verb
Etymology: From Middle French exhaler, from Latin exhalare, from ex (“out”) + halare (“to breathe”).
- To expel air from the lungs through the nose or mouth by action of the diaphragm, to breathe out.
- To expel (something, such as tobacco smoke) from the lungs by action of the diaphragm.
- To pass off in the form of vapour; to emerge.
“Above was a tiled roof – though from that imperfect tiling exhaled stench and pestilence.”
“Passengers on the earliest railway services would not even have enjoyed the luxury of a platform, instead having to step up onto the waiting open top wagons, where they would experience a journey that left many choking on the plumes of smoke exhaled by the leading locomotive.”
- To emit (a vapour, an odour, etc.).
“The earth exhales vapor; marshes exhale noxious effluvia.”
“Leſs fragrant Scents th' unfolding Roſe exhales, / Or Spices breathing in Arabian Gales.”
- To draw out; to cause to be emitted in vapour.
“The sun exhales the moisture of the earth.”