Exhale - meaning and definition. What is Exhale
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What (who) is Exhale - definition

FLOW OF THE RESPIRATORY CURRENT OUT OF AN ORGANISM
Exhale; Exhaling; Exhaled; Passive expiration; Expiratory; Exhalant; Exhalent; Expirate; 😮‍💨; Expiration (breathing out)

exhale         
(exhales, exhaling, exhaled)
When you exhale, you breathe out the air that is in your lungs. (FORMAL)
Hold your breath for a moment and exhale...
Wade exhaled a cloud of smoke and coughed.
= breathe out
? inhale
VERB: V, V n
exhalation (exhalations)
Milton let out his breath in a long exhalation.
N-VAR
Exhale         
·vi To rise or be given off, as vapor; to pass off, or vanish.
II. Exhale ·vt To draw out; to cause to be emitted in vapor; as, the sum exhales the moisture of the earth.
III. Exhale ·vt To breathe out. Hence: To emit, as vapor; to send out, as an odor; to Evaporate; as, the earth exhales vapor; marshes exhale noxious effluvia.
exhale         
[?ks'he?l, ?ks-]
¦ verb
1. breathe out.
2. give off (vapour or fumes).
Derivatives
exhalable adjective
exhalation noun
Origin
ME: from OFr. exhaler, from L. exhalare, from ex- 'out' + halare 'breathe'.

Wikipedia

Exhalation

Exhalation (or expiration) is the flow of the breath out of an organism. In animals, it is the movement of air from the lungs out of the airways, to the external environment during breathing. This happens due to elastic properties of the lungs, as well as the internal intercostal muscles which lower the rib cage and decrease thoracic volume. As the thoracic diaphragm relaxes during exhalation it causes the tissue it has depressed to rise superiorly and put pressure on the lungs to expel the air. During forced exhalation, as when blowing out a candle, expiratory muscles including the abdominal muscles and internal intercostal muscles generate abdominal and thoracic pressure, which forces air out of the lungs.

Exhaled air is 4% carbon dioxide, a waste product of cellular respiration during the production of energy, which is stored as ATP. Exhalation has a complementary relationship to inhalation which together make up the respiratory cycle of a breath.

Examples of use of Exhale
1. In other words, out of a genre stereotype rut, "Something New" finds a way to exhale.
2. "It‘s like taking a big, deep breath and being able to exhale," she said.
3. When you exhale, the breath you put out, you breathe back in.
4. "Those people who were most worried can exhale," said Robert M.
5. But if you start to simulate smoking, and instead of inhaling you have to exhale, it‘s completely idiotic.