Breath
in sentence
1085 examples of Breath in a sentence
Okay, take a deep
breath
through your nose.
On the other hand, virtually all the atoms you come in to contact with through the course of your life, the ones in the ground beneath you, the air you breath, the food you eat, those that make up every living thing, including you, have existed for billions of years and were created in places very unlike our planet.
Think about this: with the exception of hydrogen and some helium, the ground you walk on, the air you breath, you, everything is made of atoms that were created inside stars.
If a potential mate has managed to pass all these tests, there's still one more: the infamous first kiss, a rich and complex exchange of tactile and chemical cues, such as the smell of one's breath, and the taste of their mouth.
I mean, imagine yourself here in this room, if you were suddenly plunged into blackness, with your only job to find the exit, sometimes swimming through these large spaces, and at other times crawling beneath the seats, following a thin guideline, just waiting for the life support to provide your very next
breath.
This hunched shape also shrinks your chest cavity while you sit, meaning your lungs have less space to expand into when you
breath.
This horrible scourge is halitosis, otherwise known as bad
breath.
In one poll, 59% of men and 70% of women said they wouldn't go on a date with someone who has bad breath, which may be why Americans alone spend $1 billion a year on various
breath
products.
Fortunately, most bad
breath
is easily treated.
But one of the biggest challenges lies in actually determining how our
breath
smells in the first place, and it's unclear why.
But there's one simple, if socially difficult, way of finding out how your
breath
smells: just take a deep
breath
and ask a friend.
When I was first learning to meditate, the instruction was to simply pay attention to my breath, and when my mind wandered, to bring it back.
So back to my
breath.
Now, just like trying to force myself to pay attention to my breath, they could try to force themselves to quit smoking.
CO2 is the exhaling
breath
of our civilization, literally.
I've smelled the fishy, fishy
breath
of humpback whales feeding just feet away from me in the cold seas off Canada's Great Bear Rainforest.
On a single breath, swim with me in deep, into one of the largest and densest schools of fish I have ever encountered.
Sometimes, a bout of hiccups will go on and on, and we try home remedies: sipping continuously from a glass of cold water, holding one's breath, a mouthful of honey or peanut butter, breathing into a paper bag, or being suddenly frightened.
Some people experience nausea or shortness of
breath.
The crowd holds its breath, and, at the crucial moment, she misses the shot.
[everyone in the vicinity held their breath] "Their" is plural and "everyone," its antecedent, is singular.
But people say things like, "Everyone held their
breath"
all the time.
I couldn't make it, "Everyone held her breath," or "Everyone held his breath," or "Everyone held his or her breath."
I asked, through the editor, if the author would consider changing it to "All in the vicinity held their breath," because "all" is plural.
I tried again: "All those present held their breath?"
But on "Everyone held their breath," he stood his ground.
Has anyone here wondered what will happen if you go back to your room at night, and you start getting chest pains, shortness of breath, sweating?
In the time it takes to draw a breath, we were plunged into a darkness so immense that it was almost tangible; what I imagine wading through tar might be like.
So when you take your next breath, you'll be breathing in 42 percent more carbon dioxide than if you were breathing in 1750.
So, everybody take a deep
breath
in,
breath
out.
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