zephyr

Etymology
From, from. . The confectionery sense is a.

Noun



 * 1) A light wind from the west.
 * 2) Any light refreshing wind; a gentle breeze.
 * 3) Anything of fine, soft, or light quality, especially fabric.
 * 4)  A type of soft confectionery made by whipping fruit and berry purée (mostly apple purée) with sugar and egg whites with subsequent addition of a gelling agent like pectin, carrageenan, agar, or gelatine.
 * 1) Anything of fine, soft, or light quality, especially fabric.
 * 2)  A type of soft confectionery made by whipping fruit and berry purée (mostly apple purée) with sugar and egg whites with subsequent addition of a gelling agent like pectin, carrageenan, agar, or gelatine.
 * 1) Anything of fine, soft, or light quality, especially fabric.
 * 2)  A type of soft confectionery made by whipping fruit and berry purée (mostly apple purée) with sugar and egg whites with subsequent addition of a gelling agent like pectin, carrageenan, agar, or gelatine.
 * 1) Anything of fine, soft, or light quality, especially fabric.
 * 2)  A type of soft confectionery made by whipping fruit and berry purée (mostly apple purée) with sugar and egg whites with subsequent addition of a gelling agent like pectin, carrageenan, agar, or gelatine.
 * 1)  A type of soft confectionery made by whipping fruit and berry purée (mostly apple purée) with sugar and egg whites with subsequent addition of a gelling agent like pectin, carrageenan, agar, or gelatine.

Translations

 * Armenian:
 * Old Armenian: զեփիւռ
 * Belarusian: зефі́р
 * Bulgarian:
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin: ,
 * Czech:
 * Dutch:
 * Esperanto:
 * Estonian: läänetuul
 * Finnish: ,
 * French:
 * Georgian: ნიავი, სიო, ზეფირი
 * German:
 * Hebrew:
 * Hungarian:
 * Ido:
 * Italian: ,
 * Japanese:
 * Latin: zephyrus
 * Maori: kōtengitengi, hau maiangi
 * Persian: باد فرودین, باد دبور
 * Polish:
 * Portuguese:
 * Romanian:
 * Russian:, лёгкий ветеро́к,
 * Serbo-Croatian: зефи́р
 * Spanish: céfiro
 * Ukrainian: зефі́р


 * Belarusian: зефі́р
 * Bulgarian:
 * French:
 * German:
 * Hungarian:
 * Italian: zefir,
 * Japanese: ゼファー
 * Romanian:
 * Russian:
 * Turkish:
 * Ukrainian: зефі́р

Verb

 * 1)  To blow or move like a zephyr, or light breeze.
 * 2)  To blow or blow on gently like a zephyr; to cool or refresh with a gentle breeze.
 * 3) * 1849, letter from dated 15 December, 1849, in Walter Clark Palmer, Life and Letters of Leonidas L. Hamline, D.D., New York: Carlton & Porter, 1866, Chapter 15, p. 361,
 * He was a fragrant poison, a zephyred pestilence spread through all the city.
 * 1) * 1914, Leonard Lanson Cline, untitled sonnet in Poems, Boston: The Poet Lore Company, p. 76,
 * Ah, but the skies are joyous in the spring,
 * From dawn to dusk exuberantly blue;
 * White-tufted oftentimes with clouds that do
 * But wanton in heaven’s zephyred merrying!
 * 1) * 1914, Juliane Paulsen (pseudonym of Juliane Grace Hansen), “Poppy Fantasy” in And Then Came Spring, Boston: The Gorham Press, p. 49,
 * Oh, graciously she led my soul within
 * Where ever and forever went a wind
 * In zephyred streams of poppies coursing sweet
 * About the place, and waves of poppy heat
 * About us there.
 * In zephyred streams of poppies coursing sweet
 * About the place, and waves of poppy heat
 * About us there.