miasma in English

noun
1
a highly unpleasant or unhealthy smell or vapor.
a miasma of stale alcohol hung around him like marsh gas

Use "miasma" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "miasma" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "miasma", or refer to the context using the word "miasma" in the English Dictionary.

1. A lurid miasma dazed his vision.

2. A miasma rose from the marsh.

3. The miasma of defeat hung over them.

4. A miasma of stale alcohol hung around him.

5. An acrid miasma came from the sewage plant.

6. The novel spun a miasma of death and decay.

7. Those flowers are poisonous, child, and their perfume is a miasma.

8. He looked up at me through a miasma of cigarette smoke.

9. You feel the devastation of the war like a miasma over the battlefield.

10. After he lost his job, he sank into a miasma of poverty and despair.

11. Changing water levels now at times unleash a miasma of disease from exposed sewage.

12. The two of them now a superstitious swamp devil, humming, hovering, and plowing through miasma.

13. He wondered how his life had degenerated into this clawing miasma of raw unfulfilled need.

14. But here the clouds converge and mist falls and general miasma overtakes the public brain.

15. Smoke from a bonfire of garbage mixes with the miasma of smog in the sky.

16. It's as if the disease is not transmitted by air or miasma, but by false rumour.

17. Synonyms for Ague include fever, malaria, miasma, miasm, paludism, jungle fever, fever and Ague, malarial fever, feverishness and affection

18. The elderly lady looked up through her miasma of smoke and pinched her face into a tight little smile.

19. The name Agos comes from the ancient word ΑΓΟΣ, where in time was meant "miasma" or the one …

20. I went to wash up as the table edge trembled to a familiar sick-to-the-gut miasma of nothingness.

21. As time went on, his ambition to be part of the US Supreme Court faded in a miasma of alcohol and despair.

22. The development of forced ventilation was spurred by the common belief in the late 18th and early 19th century in the miasma theory of disease, where stagnant 'airs' were thought to spread illness.

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