The very vestments of you Levites should exhale infectious humility; and I especially need exhortations against pride, my besetting sin.
To render volatile; to cause to exhale or evaporate; to cause to pass off in vapor.
To breathe; to inhale air into the lungs, and exhale it from them, successively, for the purpose of maintaining the vitality of the blood.
The rank and massive foliage shields the earth from the sunbeams, which exhale its poisonous damps; and in its rapid growth, the plant abstracts from the surrounding atmosphere one of its vital ingredients.
The mangaỹ is about the size of a cherry-tree, and bears white flowers, whichexhale a very delightful odour.
If we take a deep inspiration, and then forcibly exhale all the air we can expel from the lungs, this amount, which is termed the breathing capacity, will bear a very close correspondence to our stature.
The blood, thus purified and laden with the inspiring oxygen, goes bounding through the system, while the air we exhale carries off the impurities.
The subject examined at the end of two months, was well preserved, did not exhale any fetid odour, and might serve for the common dissection of students.
The parts exhale a urinous odour, which, when once smelt by the practitioner, can never afterwards be mistaken.
They have a fishy odour; they exhale also a strong scent of sea birds, and sometimes of musk, caused by their eating of the animal containing it without preparation.
Its streets are badly paved; enormous gutters, separating the roadway from the pavement, expose carriages to danger and exhale noxious odours, filled as they are with filthy water and refuse of every kind.
The Cathedral quarter by a river bend seems to exhale a quite different atmosphere from the whole of the rest of the town.
He had told her indeed that she intoxicated him; and truly, in those moments when she was compelled to oppose her dewy eloquence to his fervid importunities, her whole presence seemed to him to exhale a singularly potent sweetness.
Marian's baby breathing grew deeper and more tranquil; and as all the sorrows of the weary earth might be imagined to exhalethemselves in spring through the breath of violets, so it seemed as if it might be with Kenmure's burdened heart.
Then reverse the order; inhale slowly and exhale rapidly.
So, the flowery brilliancy of style, the charms and graces of diction of many a modern novel are fascinating, but the pages they adorn exhale a deadly breath.
A handful of these flowers will sometimes exhale a sweet fragrance; at other times, or from another locality, they are scentless.
Literally, that which exhales, in the sense of that which escapes: but in modern English the verbexhale in the active voice is now not used of the substance that escapes, but is used of the thing which emits it.
It is probable therefore that amber does exhale something peculiar to * itself, which allures bodies themselves, not the intermediate air.
Dark persons (according to Gould and Pyle) are said sometimes to exhale a prussic acid odor, and blondes more frequently musk; Galopin associates the ambergris odor more especially with blondes.
Their bodies and their clothesexhale an indefinable fragrance of purity and sex combined.
Long Island seemed to gather, blend, and exhale for my particular benefit that afternoon.
Huge coleas accentuate the spring verdure with heavy masses of bronze and crimson, and magnolias exhale intoxicating odours from snowy chalices.
The men are obliged to inhale the breath through the flannel and exhale through the nostril, otherwise they would, in technical jargon, be "gassed.
Secondly, lime for many months continues to attract moisture from the air or earth, which it deprives I suppose of carbonic acid, and then suffers it to exhale again, as is seen on the plastered walls of new houses.
In respect to the fetor attending copious continued sweats, it is owing to the animalized part of this fluid being kept in that degree of warmth, which most favours putrefaction, and not suffered to exhaleinto the atmosphere.
These, owing partly to the great quantity of sinky and of garlic which they eat, and partly to the dirtiness of their linen, exhale a worse smell than any people I have ever been among.
The roots are then buried in a pit for six or seven days, during which they seem to undergo a kind of half putrid fermentation; as when they are taken out of the pit, and dried in the sun, they exhale a most powerful stench.
Give me exhaustless, make me a fountain, That I exhale love from me wherever I go like a moist perennial dew, For the ashes of all dead soldiers South or North.
Sometimes he would stop abruptly, would breathe deeply and then exhale like a man who has been too long under water.
Sergey Golovin heaved a deep sigh and held his breath, as though he regretted to exhalefrom his lungs the fine, fresh air.
He would fill his chest with air and then exhale it, slowly in a prolonged tremulous howl, and, cocking his eyes, would listen intently as the sound issued forth.
The leaves only exhale oxygen gas when exposed to light.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "exhale" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.