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verb

breathe

breeth
verb
1
To draw air into the lungs and expel it.
"Try to breathe slowly and calm yourself down."
"She breathed in the fresh mountain air."
2
To pause briefly to rest or recover.
"Let the team breathe for a minute before the next drill."
3
To say something very quietly, almost as a whisper.
"He breathed her name as he drifted off to sleep."

How to Use Breathe

Learner’s notes

In plain EnglishTo take air in and out of the lungs — or figuratively, to pause and rest, or to whisper something softly.

Common mistake

Breathe is the verb; breath is the noun. "I need to breath" is a common misspelling — it should be "I need to breathe."

Easily confused with

Word Forms

breathed past tense, breathe plural, breathed plural, breathes singular, breathe singular, breathed singular, breathest singular, breathedst singular, breatheth singular

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Fill the Gap

Can you complete this real example?

Try to _____ slowly and calm yourself down.

Etymology

From Middle English brethen, derived from breth ("breath").

Related Words

Rhymes for breathe

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Definitions: FreeDict original editorial