Definition
Past tense of 'breeze'; moved smoothly and effortlessly, or moved as if caught by a breeze.
Etymology
From 'breeze' (a gentle wind) plus the past tense suffix '-ed.' 'Breeze' may come from Dutch or Portuguese sources through trade contact, entering English in the 17th century.
Kelly Says
The verb 'breeze' meaning 'to move easily' is oddly much newer than the noun 'breeze' (wind)—humans watched wind move things so effortlessly that they eventually used it as a metaphor for casual success.
Translations
CACatalà
s'ha fet
s'a feˈt
CSČeština
proujel
ˈproʊjel
ELΕλληνικά
έπνευσε
ˈɛpˈnɛːsɛ
FRFrançais
a soufflé
a suˈfle
HIहिन्दी
हवा में बह गया
hava mein ba gaya
IDBahasa Indonesia
bertiup
berˈtiup
ITItaliano
ha sfiorato
a sfioˈraːto
JA日本語
そよ風になった
soyo kaze ni natta
KO한국어
살랑거렸다
salanggeo-ryeotda
MSBahasa Melayu
bertiup
berˈtiup
NLNederlands
waaide
ˈwaːidə
PLPolski
przewiał
przewˈjaːw
PTPortuguês
soprou
soˈpɾu
RORomână
a suflat
a suˈflat
RUРусский
пронесся
pronessya
SVSvenska
svalkade
svɑːlˈkɑːdə
TRTürkçe
esinledi
esɪnˈledɪ
UKУкраїнська
пролет
proˈlɛt
VITiếng Việt
gió nhẹ
gió nhẹ
ZH中文
微风拂过
wēi fēng fú guò