Haze in a sentence as a noun

Don't mind the marketing haze, it's all serious tech under the hood.

Tried on a Mac Air in both Chrome 14 / FF 8 and all you see is a giant blue haze with a white outline of the X-Wing.

Look at any satellite image and see the low level haze from things like jet plane 'contrails' plus coastal fog etc.

Most people who have done opium still seek out life and pleasures beyond the artificial orgasmic haze of the high.

You've got to sacrifice your 20s and much of your 30s in a haze of work, and the odds are still very slim that you'll win the tenure lottery.

In fact, if you lived for the now, you'd probably be living in a soma-induced haze la Huxley's Brave New World: it'd be the optimal choice, in fact.

Just because you had to spend three years of your life to get to your current level of productivity doesn't mean you should haze new developers the same way.

I find it rather an epiphany to realise that our distant ancestors must have seen the sky like this all the time, rather than the vague haze most of us experience.

Haze in a sentence as a verb

People would rather cram things down by force or not at all, because if they open the floor to conversation, their ideas will be lost in the haze of personal accusation.

Blue light may be interrupting sleep patterns, but I assume people who call themselves night owls share with me a certain feeling of mental haze during daylight hours, regardless of sleep schedule.

You would never see something like that over a major metropolis without also removing "regular" particulate pollution and heat haze.

The document and video encoding system we used at massify, a self-scaling multi-format disconnected conversion cloud, was designed and built in a very stoned haze.

But if you watch those three videos in their entirety, you'll see that there is an interesting question behind the haze of giddy panic that bubbles just below the surface of his outward frustrations and ramblings.

If researchers have the resources and inclination to engage with specific claims and put them to the test, surprising discoveries can still result in this day and age.[1] Of course, that doesn't mean that discussion of any one patient's treatment should always be surrounded by a haze of quackery.

Often, the act of writing something forces me to commit to a particular thought rather than the Heisenberg-uncertainty haze that is usually bouncing around in my brain, and it is often the case that once the thought has been nailed down it looks a lot less compelling than it did when it was still a probability function.

Haze definitions

noun

atmospheric moisture or dust or smoke that causes reduced visibility

noun

confusion characterized by lack of clarity

See also: daze

verb

become hazy, dull, or cloudy

verb

harass by imposing humiliating or painful tasks, as in military institutions