Breese vs. Breeze — What's the Difference?
Difference Between Breese and Breeze
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Compare with Definitions
Breese
Obsolete spelling of breeze.
Breeze
A light current of air; a gentle wind.
Breeze
Any of five winds with speeds of from 4 to 27 knots (5 to 31 miles per hour; 7 to 50 kilometers per hour), according to the Beaufort scale.
Breeze
(Informal) Something, such as a task, that is easy to do.
Breeze
The refuse left when coke or charcoal is made.
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Breeze
To move quickly, smoothly, or easily
Breezing along on the freeway.
Breeze
To progress swiftly or easily
We breezed through the test.
Breeze
A light, gentle wind.
The breeze rustled the papers on her desk.
Breeze
(figurative) Any activity that is easy, not testing or difficult.
After studying Latin, Spanish was a breeze.
Breeze
(cricket) Wind blowing across a cricket match, whatever its strength.
Breeze
An excited or ruffled state of feeling; a flurry of excitement; a disturbance; a quarrel.
The discovery produced a breeze.
Breeze
A brief workout for a racehorse.
Breeze
A gadfly; a horsefly; a strong-bodied dipterous insect of the family Tabanidae.
Breeze
Ashes and residue of coal or charcoal, usually from a furnace. See Wikipedia article on Clinker.
Breeze
To move casually, in a carefree manner.
Breeze
(weather) To blow gently.
Breeze
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.
Breeze
(of fish) To swim near the surface of the water, causing ripples in the surface.
Breeze
(intransitive) To buzz.
Breeze
A fly of various species, of the family Tabanidæ, noted for buzzing about animals, and tormenting them by sucking their blood; - called also horsefly, and gadfly. They are among the largest of two-winged or dipterous insects. The name is also given to different species of botflies.
Breeze
A light, gentle wind; a fresh, soft-blowing wind.
Into a gradual calm the breezes sink.
Breeze
An excited or ruffed state of feeling; a flurry of excitement; a disturbance; a quarrel; as, the discovery produced a breeze.
Breeze
Refuse left in the process of making coke or burning charcoal.
Breeze
Refuse coal, coal ashes, and cinders, used in the burning of bricks.
Breeze
To blow gently.
Breeze
A slight wind (usually refreshing);
The breeze was cooled by the lake
As he waited he could feel the air on his neck
Breeze
Any undertaking that is easy to do;
Marketing this product will be no picnic
Breeze
Blow gently and lightly;
It breezes most evenings at the shore
Breeze
To proceed quickly and easily
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