How to Use miasma in a Sentence

miasma

noun
  • The city stewed for days in a miasma of anger and fear.
    The Economist, 9 Jan. 2020
  • But the canals, what’s left of them, now are lined with trash and exude a miasma tinged with the scent of sewage.
    Nabih Bulos, latimes.com, 17 June 2018
  • Gomez spent a few weeks in a miasma of panic, then got to work.
    Jia Tolentino, Vogue, 9 Mar. 2021
  • The coronavirus acts like a miasma and a germ, all at once.
    Jill Lepore, The New Yorker, 31 Aug. 2020
  • But in other ways, she is still trapped in the miasma of despair.
    Amy Qin, New York Times, 11 Feb. 2024
  • All those tiny pieces of ash combining to shroud Lake Tahoe, a gray miasma that warns of the megafire just eight miles from the shore.
    New York Times, 1 Sep. 2021
  • Amid a miasma of exhaust, Smalls lit a firepit on cold nights, played music, served food and made s’mores.
    Greg Jaffe, Washington Post, 12 June 2022
  • The red miasma swam before her eyes, her stomach churned in IT’s rhythm.
    Meghan Cox Gurdon, WSJ, 21 Dec. 2018
  • An acrid miasma emanates from the pan in which the detritus sits.
    Robert Hackett, Fortune, 24 May 2018
  • With his wife pregnant and the neighbors restive, a miasma of anxious questions arise about the fate of Taroon and the people who help him.
    Peter Marks, Washington Post, 6 Mar. 2023
  • The fear of contagion — the viral spread of suicide through social groups — hung over the school like a miasma.
    Sonja Sharp, Los Angeles Times, 30 Nov. 2023
  • But the fire turned her landscape from muse into miasma.
    Reis Thebault, Washington Post, 7 Feb. 2024
  • But after the funerals end and the crowds go away, pain settles like miasma.
    Elizabeth Williamson, The Atlantic, 2 June 2022
  • There is a vacuum—a miasma of confusion and chaos—at the top of the civilian command.
    Fred Kaplan, Slate Magazine, 16 Aug. 2017
  • The problem was not miasma but the lack of basic cleanliness.
    John J. Ross, WSJ, 13 Oct. 2017
  • One result is a miasma of distrust of all public speech.
    George Will, National Review, 20 Sep. 2017
  • Enlarge / Not pictured: the things that are far more dangerous to fortress-dwelling dwarves, like poor site planning, miasma, and a lack of drink.
    Kevin Purdy, Ars Technica, 5 Dec. 2022
  • The Pinheiros River that runs through the heart of Sao Paulo makes its pollution known with a miasma that wafts across city streets, choking rich and poor alike.
    Star Tribune, 23 Oct. 2020
  • According to the miasma theory, scents were a matter of life and death.
    Katy Kelleher, Longreads, 10 Aug. 2020
  • On a hillside above the Russian River, a broad and menacing band of fire is turning a blue sky into a gray miasma of soot.
    Thomas Fuller, Denise Grady and Richard PÉrez-PeÑa, New York Times, 12 Oct. 2017
  • My assumption had been that words would lead my daughter out of her miasma of depression and anger.
    Wired, 5 July 2022
  • But to get there, a reader has to wade through a miasma of awkward phrasing in this clunky English translation by Daniel Hahn.
    Washington Post, 12 Aug. 2021
  • Haze was even visible as far east as the Hudson Valley, where a dreary miasma hung over the picturesque towns north of the five boroughs.
    Liam Stack, New York Times, 29 June 2023
  • Bannos says there wasn’t a big scandal — even though miasma had been cited as a great need to relocate the bodies.
    Emilie Le Beau Lucchesi, Discover Magazine, 18 Oct. 2021
  • The disease that has caused them so much pain has been perpetually on the news and on people’s lips—a miasma of triggers that has kept their grief raw.
    Ed Yong, The Atlantic, 13 Apr. 2022
  • Outside is the new inside, so anything that allows people to avoid the miasma of their homes when relaxing is hot hot hot.
    Washington Post, 15 Nov. 2020
  • At the time people believed in miasma, or the notion that illness spread by noxious vapors.
    Eleanor Cummins, The New Republic, 24 Dec. 2021
  • There is no evident liquid, but there is a clinging residue and a real thick miasma.
    Maggie Lange, Bon Appetit, 29 Aug. 2017
  • News exhaustion is a miasma that has afflicted almost all of us for some time now.
    Michael Luo, The New Yorker, 13 Dec. 2023
  • Troubles up top Trace the nearly two decades of Raiders miasma to uneven stewardship.
    San Diego Union-Tribune, 6 Sep. 2019

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'miasma.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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