| 释义 | 
		ex·hale I. \eksˈhāl, chiefly before pause or consonant -āəl\ verb (-ed/-ing/-s) Etymology: Middle English exalen, from Latin exhalare, from ex- ex- (I) + halare to breathe; akin to Latin anima breath — more at animate transitive verb 1.  : to breathe out : let or force out of the lungs  < exhaled carbon dioxide >  < exhaled a sigh > 2.  : to give off or give forth (gas or odor) : emit  < the turned earth exhaled in the warm sun a delicate fragrance — Mary Austin > 3. archaic  : to draw out (moisture) : evaporate 4.  : to discharge through a membranous surface — used in old medical terminology intransitive verb 1.  : to rise or be given off as vapor  < a bad smell exhaling from the kitchen — Glenway Wescott >  : emanate; also  : to vanish by or as if by evaporation  < dried his hands … instead of suffering the moisture to exhale — Sir Walter Scott > 2.  : to breathe out : let or force the breath out — opposed to inhale 3.  : to percolate through a membrane : ooze — used in old medical terminology Synonyms: see emit II. transitive verb Etymology: ex- (I) + hale (to draw)  obsolete  : to draw or force out  < and what those sorrows could not thence exhale, thy beauty hath, and made them blind with weeping — Shakespeare > |