The difference between Breeze and Hurricane

When used as nouns, breeze means a light, gentle wind, whereas hurricane means a severe tropical cyclone in the north atlantic ocean, caribbean sea, gulf of mexico, or in the eastern north pacific off the west coast of mexico, with winds of 119 km/h (74 miles per hour) or greater accompanied by rain, lightning, and thunder that sometimes moves into temperate latitudes.


Breeze is also verb with the meaning: to move casually, in a carefree manner.

check bellow for the other definitions of Breeze and Hurricane

  1. Breeze as a noun:

    A light, gentle wind.

    Examples:

    "The breeze rustled the papers on her desk."

  2. Breeze as a noun (figurative):

    Any activity that is easy, not testing or difficult.

    Examples:

    "After studying Latin, Spanish was a breeze."

  3. Breeze as a noun (cricket):

    Wind blowing across a cricket match, whatever its strength.

  4. Breeze as a noun:

    Ashes and residue of coal or charcoal, usually from a furnace. .

  5. Breeze as a noun:

    An excited or ruffled state of feeling; a flurry of excitement; a disturbance; a quarrel.

    Examples:

    "The discovery produced a breeze."

  1. Breeze as a verb (usually, _, with ''along''):

    To move casually, in a carefree manner.

  2. Breeze as a verb (weather):

    To blow gently.

  3. Breeze as a verb:

    To take a horse under a light run in order to understand the running characteristics of the horse and to observe it while under motion.

  1. Breeze as a noun:

    A gadfly; a horsefly; a strong-bodied dipterous insect of the family Tabanidae.

  1. Breeze as a verb (intransitive):

    To buzz.

  1. Hurricane as a noun:

    A severe tropical cyclone in the North Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean Sea, Gulf of Mexico, or in the eastern North Pacific off the west coast of Mexico, with winds of 119 km/h (74 miles per hour) or greater accompanied by rain, lightning, and thunder that sometimes moves into temperate latitudes.

  2. Hurricane as a noun (meteorology):

    a wind scale for quite strong wind, stronger than a storm

  1. Hurricane as a noun (sports, aerial freestyle skiing):

    "full—triple-full—full" – an acrobatic maneuver consisting of three flips and five twists, with one twist on the first flip, three twists on the second flip, one twist on the third flip