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Ride with the air
Answer for the clue "Ride with the air ", 4 letters:
waft
Alternative clues for the word waft
Word definitions for waft in dictionaries
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Waft \Waft\, n. A wave or current of wind. ``Everywaft of the air.'' --Longfellow. In this dire season, oft the whirlwind's wing Sweeps up the burden of whole wintry plains In one wide waft. --Thomson. A signal made by waving something, as ...
Usage examples of waft.
Here is the Park, And O, the languid midsummer wafts adust, The tired midsummer blooms!
The soothing smells of Akasha wafted slowly into her psyche, like a balm to her soul.
Ulysses someone approached and he came alert, the sadness wafting away like alder down blown by the wind.
As the shadows receded amid a fragrant waft of incense smoke, the Master used a second key to unlock the second of the aumbries, from which he brought out a stoppered flask of alabaster and a miniature silver chalice.
Indirect lighting, music wafting up the stairs, and a visit to the aviary should round out our ghostly evening to perfection.
The succulent aroma of barbecuing pork wafted through the chill spring air, and fragrant clouds of hickory smoke rose from the fires near the smithy, where haunches of venison, sides of mutton, and broiled fowl in their dozens turned on spits.
At any moment Bora expected to see the snowcap melt and waft away into the night as green-hued steam.
But he had scarcely emitted three puffs before the piping voice of Arabella Cadge was again wafted to his ears.
In their place wafted cream-colored curtains of caffoy or lace, chairs and sofas done in satins and tapestry, and live plants in pots, along with freshly cut flowers in crystal vases.
Turkish coffee and smoking the chicha, then past the gargotes, where the aroma of kebabs and kefta wafted into the street.
A multitude of whelps came forth from the lair of this barbaric lioness, in three cyuls, as they call them, that is, in there ships of war, with their sails wafted by the wind and with omens and prophecies favourable, for it was foretold by a certain soothsayer among them, that they should occupy the country to which they were sailing three hundred years, and half of that time, a hundred and fifty years, should plunder and despoil the same.
We had reached the shore, warm, welcoming lights glowed from the dahabeeyah and the aroma of roasting mutton wafted to our nostrils.
The smell of cooking grease, some foul egestion wafting aloft from the bilges, the fug of damp wool and unwashed bod- ies was fit to make him gag, but he forbore manfully.
But the smell which hung over the battery, which stood between barracks and gun positions, between the computer and the shrapnel trenches, and scarcely moved its supporting leg, the smell which, as Harry and everyone else knew, was projected neither by rats nor by crows, which arose from no drain and hence from no errancy, this smell was wafted, regardless of whether the wind was working from Putzig or Dirschau, from the harbor-mouth bar or from the open sea, by a whitish mound blocked off by barbed wire and situated to the south of the battery.
She floated, lightly tethered, in the gentle stream blowing out of the air chair, slim graceful body semi-foetal, arms waving, her long, end-tied chestnut hair blossoming above her like a cobra hood, wrapping over her head then wafting back again.