breezen

verb

Etymology

From breeze + -en.

  1. derived from *bʰerem- — “to make a noise, buzz, hum
  2. inherited from *bremusī — “gadfly
  3. inherited from brēosa
  4. inherited from brese
  5. formed as breezen — “breeze + -en

Definitions

  1. To grow or develop into a breeze

    To grow or develop into a breeze; be or become breezy

    • We're going to have a brush out of this, and resk it, you!" declared Job, beating his hat against the counter inside. "It's thick o' snow a'ready, and breezening on stiddy from out here to the s'utheast."
    • This wind breezens on at every hand's turn now, and I wisht I could know for certain whether Uncle Pelly made out to pull them trawls of hisn, out there on the 'Garden' to-day.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for breezen. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA