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  • Breathe vs. breath, why so much misuse? [closed]
    Breathe vs breath, why so much misuse? [closed] Ask Question Asked 11 years, 1 month ago Modified 11 years, 1 month ago
  • Catch ones breath vs Ones breath caught [closed]
    I was looking into the usage of 'to catch one's breath' To my understanding, it's used to denote a pause between an intake of breath and the release However, I was told that the idiom is more commonly rendered as 'one's breath caught in one's throat' and this got me thinking about who's doing the catching
  • Can breathing be uneven? [closed] - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    Are there other expressions to describe the following statement "her pulse quickened" I assume it depends on context, but does this expression implies a positive source or a negative one ? In terms of regular breathing, can one qualify someone's breath of "steady", or "quite steady" ? Essentially, how does one breathe in English ?
  • What is the difference between wealth of knowledge and breadth of . . .
    I don't see them as interchangeable What about depth of knowledge You could exhibit great breath of knowledge knowing one or two minor facts about each product A wealth of knowledge seems to imply both breadth and depth of knowledge
  • OUT OF BREATH v. s BREATHLESS - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Out of breath means just that, that you are physically out of breath Breathless is generally used in other phrasing, such as "breathless with anticipation" or a similar "breathtaking candor " Usually it's used metaphorically to say that something so exceptional has happened that it figuratively took your breath away Out of breath means you're literally out of breath If you are trying to say
  • Is there a specific name for that singular exhalation laugh that . . .
    noun: A heavy breath; a grunt or sigh verb: (intransitive) To breathe heavily Puff and chuff can be used similary but the phrases puffed a small laugh and chuffed a small laugh are much less common in Google Books Chuff usually describes a more loud and forceful sound by itself; and here is a good description from vocabulary com:
  • grammaticality - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Depends on if 'breath' is considered an indivisible noun in context 'They carried sand' vs 'They carried sands ' Both are correct, both say something different 'They combed their hair' vs 'They combed their hairs' Both fine, emphasis is different 'They received money' vs 'They received monies' Each correct, each different 'They saw the light' vs 'They saw the lights' Correct
  • Why are bath and bathe pronounced differently?
    The voicing of the verb's consonant goes hand in glove with this, as it does in other contrasting pairs where the noun in unvoiced and the verb voiced: breath breathe, wreath wreathe, sheath sheathe, tooth teethe, grief grieve, belief believe, house house, serf serve, safe save, life live, shelf shelve, half halve, calf calve, wolf wolve, cloth
  • Usage of “hitch - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    I always see the expression “his breath hitched” or “his breathing hitched ” However, as far as I can tell in the dictionary, the word “hitched” does not denote anything I can relate to breathing Of
  • What is the difference between breathe and blow?
    Ordinarily only animals breathe Blow is more general, and humans and wind can both blow, but blow refers to a volitional action if it has a human subject





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