waft /wɑːft, wɒft $ wɑːft, wæft/ verb 1 [intransitiveI, transitiveT always + adverbadv/prepositionprep]MOVE/CHANGE POSITION if a smell, smoke, or a light wind wafts somewhere, or if something wafts it somewhere, it moves gently through the air (使)〔在空气中〕飘荡;〔风〕吹拂waft up/through/over etc Cooking smells wafted up from downstairs. 烧菜的气味从楼下飘了上来。
2 [intransitiveI always + adverbadv/prepositionprep] if sounds waft somewhere, you hear them there and they are pleasant but not very loud 〔声音〕飘荡,传送waft up/through/over etc The sound of laughter wafted through the open window. 笑声从敞开的窗户里传了出来。
→ drift waft up/through/over etc• The smoke wafts through a neighborhood called, appropriately enough, Fire Town, and flames occasionally dart from the earth.• A smell of bacon and eggs wafted up from the kitchen.• A breath of cold, fresh air wafted over his face, as the heavy wooden square eased up a few inches.• The talk began to waft over me, Halema's guttural Arabic being too quick and too difficult for me to catch.• The smoke wafted up my nose like incense.• Tear gas wafted over the old section of the city as police forcibly drove the crowd back.• The smell of money is wafting through the pines.• Downtown Atlanta is normally an unhurried place where the noontime odor of fried chicken wafts through the thick humidity.