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hazy
/ ˈheɪzɪ /
adjective
- characterized by reduced visibility; misty
- indistinct; vague
Derived Forms
- ˈhazily, adverb
- ˈhaziness, noun
Other Words From
- hazi·ly adverb
- hazi·ness noun
- un·hazi·ly adverb
- un·hazi·ness noun
- un·hazy adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of hazy1
Example Sentences
When the Mountain fire broke out more than two weeks ago, Samuel and Florentino witnessed the all-too familiar hazy, gray sky and the smell of smoke as they harvested strawberries in an Oxnard field.
New York Fashion Week this year was fun, hazy times.
With their hazy, smeared-on texture, Powder Kiss and similarly blurry formulas do the work for you of running into a wall or making out with someone you only kind of like.
Becky G shifts her feet in a one-two-and-three-step motion while an artificial gust powered by leaf blowers turns the scene into a hazy fog, all while she rotates to embrace the city that raised her with open arms.
"The first three days were very hazy and then very quickly he was back as we know Ryan but without the mobility unfortunately from the waist down and limited by mobility in his arms and hands," added Mrs Hayward-Brackenbury.
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