The plural of breeze is breezes.
breeze
Let's sit on the balcony with our coffee, the breeze will feel nice.
No, the noun 'breeze' is not a standard collective noun. However, collective nouns are an informal part of language. Any noun that suits the situation can function as a collective noun; for example, a breeze of compliments, a breeze of despair, a breeze of fresh air.
A sea breeze comes from the sea and a land breeze comes from the land. Here are some sentences.At night, the land breeze blows from the other side of our beach house.We learned about the land breeze in class.Temperature differences will cause a land breeze and a sea breeze.
Yes the word breeze can be a noun. It can also be used as a verb.
The nouns are rows (plural noun, subject), wheat (object of the preposition), and breeze (object of a preposition).
A sea breeze. A land breeze blows from land to sea.
The two types of breeze are land breeze and sea breeze
Land breeze is in the air sea breeze is in the water
land breeze sea breeze
breeze
A fresh breeze is strongest, gentle is weakest, moderate is in the middle.
There are Four local winds: Valley Breeze, Mountain Breeze, Land Breeze, And Sea Breeze.
In Irish its: aithleá gaoithe (small breeze) leoithne (gentle breeze) ruagán (biting breeze)
An easterly breeze is a breeze that is coming from the east and blowing toward the west.
"Me llamo Breeze". or "mi nombre es Breeze".
There wasn't a Breeze in 1990.There wasn't a Breeze in 1990.