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Definition of waft verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

waft

verb
 
/wɒft/
 
/wɑːft/,
 
/wæft/
[intransitive, transitive]
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they waft
 
/wɒft/
 
/wɑːft/,
 
/wæft/
he / she / it wafts
 
/wɒfts/
 
/wɑːfts/,
 
/wæfts/
past simple wafted
 
/ˈwɒftɪd/
 
/ˈwɑːftɪd/,
 
/ˈwæftɪd/
past participle wafted
 
/ˈwɒftɪd/
 
/ˈwɑːftɪd/,
 
/ˈwæftɪd/
-ing form wafting
 
/ˈwɒftɪŋ/
 
/ˈwɑːftɪŋ/,
 
/ˈwæftɪŋ/
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  1. to move, or make something move, gently through the air synonym drift
    • + adv./prep. The sound of their voices wafted across the lake.
    • Delicious smells wafted up from the kitchen.
    • waft something + adv./prep. The scent of the flowers was wafted along by the breeze.
    Extra Examples
    • A scent of honey wafted up from the hives.
    • Spicy smells wafted through the air.
    • The night air wafted gently over them.
    • The scent of the flowers was wafted through the window by the breeze.
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb
    • gently
    • slowly
    • around
    preposition
    • across
    • down
    • from
    See full entry
    Word Originearly 16th cent. (in the sense ‘escort a ship’): back-formation from obsolete wafter (used only by opponents of the practice) ‘armed convoy vessel’, from Low German, Dutch wachter, from wachten ‘to guard’. A sense ‘convey by water’ gave rise to the current use of the verb.
See waft in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary

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