breeze

Etymology 1

From the earlier (nautical) term brise, brize (“breeze”), from Middle English brees (“wind”). Ultimate origin obscure. Variously supposed to derive from a Germanic source like Saterland Frisian Briese (“breeze”), West Frisian brys (“a cool wind”), Dutch bries (“breeze”), early Dutch brysen (“to blow cool and fresh”), or from Spanish brisa (“northeast wind”). The earliest attestations are in Middle English brees (1460), Catalan brisa, and Italian brezza (all in 15th century), with Spanish (1504) and Portuguese briza (16th century) following closely after. The aforementioned Dutch cognates and French brise, however, are attested later than the term in English. The only internal hypothesis for any of those languages is a modification of Old Occitan bisa (“strong wind”), which is not widely accepted. Compare also Albanian breshër (“hail”).

noun

  1. A light, gentle wind.
    The breeze rustled the papers on her desk.
    Into a gradual calm the breezes sink. 1793, William Wordsworth, An Evening Walk
  2. (figurative) Any activity that is easy, not testing or difficult.
    After studying Latin, Spanish was a breeze.
  3. (cricket) Wind blowing across a cricket match, whatever its strength.
  4. An excited or ruffled state of feeling; a flurry of excitement; a disturbance; a quarrel.
    The discovery produced a breeze.
  5. A brief workout for a racehorse.

verb

  1. (usually with along) To move casually, in a carefree manner.
  2. (weather) To blow gently.
    She's sitting opposite a window that's gently breezing into her face, wafting her hair into cover-girl perfection ... 21 January 2014, Hermione Hoby, “Julia Roberts interview for August: Osage County – 'I might actually go to hell for this ...': Julia Roberts reveals why her violent, Oscar-nominated performance in August: Osage County made her feel 'like a terrible person' [print version: 'I might actually go to hell for this ...' (18 January 2014, p. R4)]”, in The Daily Telegraph (Review)
  3. To take a horse on a light run in order to understand the running characteristics of the horse and to observe it while under motion.
  4. (of fish) To swim near the surface of the water, causing ripples in the surface.
    The first was a school of medium-sized ( 10-pound average ) fish that breezed frequently but bit poorly. 1970, Commercial Fisheries Review - Volume 32, page 37
    The Queen Mary stood by while a speedboat moved ahead of a breezing school of tuna to deploy the sound projector and a sonobuoy (Figure 6). 1979, Frank T. Awbrey, Thomas Duffy, WIlliam E. Evans, C. Scott Johnson, Wesley Parks, John DeBeer, The Tuna/Porpoise Problem: Dedicated Vessel Research Program, page 10
    An intermediate line has its place when chasing breezing tuna that are moving at mach speed on the surface. 2011, Mike Rieser, Fly Fishing the Baja and Beyond, page 143

Etymology 2

From Middle English brese, from Old English brēosa, variant of Old English brimsa (“gadfly”), from Proto-Germanic *bremusī (“gadfly”), from Proto-Indo-European *bʰerem- (“to make a noise, buzz, hum”). Cognate with Dutch brems (“horsefly, warblefly”), German Bremse (“gadfly, horsefly”), Danish bremse (“gadfly, horsefly”), Swedish broms (“gadfly, horsefly”). Related also to Middle English brimse (“gadfly”), French brize (“gadfly”), Old English bremman (“to rage, roar”), Latin fremō (“roar, snort, growl, grumble”). See also bream.

noun

  1. A gadfly; a horsefly; a strong-bodied dipterous insect of the family Tabanidae.

verb

  1. (intransitive) To buzz.

Etymology 3

Probably from French braise (“burning coals”).

noun

  1. Ashes and residue of coal or charcoal, usually from a furnace. See Wikipedia article on Clinker.

Attribution / Disclaimer All definitions come directly from Wiktionary using the Wiktextract library. We do not edit or curate the definitions for any words, if you feel the definition listed is incorrect or offensive please suggest modifications directly to the source (wiktionary/breeze), any changes made to the source will update on this page periodically.