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Haze over   /heɪz ˈoʊvər/   Listen
Haze over

verb
1.
Make less visible or unclear.  Synonyms: becloud, befog, cloud, fog, mist, obnubilate, obscure.  "The big elm tree obscures our view of the valley"






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Haze over" Quotes from Famous Books



... quite a stranger. I had seen him the day before; and he was a man to be remembered on account of a peculiar blueness of the skin, in which, perhaps, some drug or chemical had left an unearthly haze over the natural flush of blood. It might have appeared the effect of sky lights and cliff shadows, if I had not seen the same blue face distinctly in Madame Clementine's house. He was standing in the middle of a room at the foot of the stairway as ...
— The Blue Man - From "Mackinac And Lake Stories", 1899 • Mary Hartwell Catherwood

... A thick belt of mopane-trees (a 'Bauhinia') hides this salt-pan, which is twenty miles in circumference, entirely from the view of a person coming from the southeast; and, at the time the pan burst upon our view, the setting sun was casting a beautiful blue haze over the white incrustations, making the whole look exactly like a lake. Oswell threw his hat up in the air at the sight, and shouted out a huzza which made the poor Bushwoman and the Bakwains think him mad. I was a little behind him, and was as completely deceived by it as ...
— Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa - Journeys and Researches in South Africa • David Livingstone

... dancing step and laughed. The sun was bright; there was a purple haze over the hills, and the nearer woods were yellow. The world was a ...
— Tiverton Tales • Alice Brown

... and shadows as we gazed on them; beyond them lay the hills of Akaroa, beautiful beyond the power of words to describe. Christchurch looked quite a large place from the great extent of ground it appeared to cover. We looked onto the south: there was a slight haze over the great Ellesmere Lake, the water of which is quite fresh, though only separated from the sea by a slight bar of sand; the high banks of the Rakaia made a deep dark line extending right back into the mountains, and beyond it we could see the Rangitata faintly gleaming in the distance; ...
— Station Life in New Zealand • Lady Barker



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