Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"windpipe" Definitions
  1. the tube in the body that carries air from the throat to the lungs
"windpipe" Antonyms

102 Sentences With "windpipe"

How to use windpipe in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "windpipe" and check conjugation/comparative form for "windpipe". Mastering all the usages of "windpipe" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Two blows to Liz's throat almost completely severed her windpipe.
A tube had to be placed in the boy's windpipe.
Remember, the man has his very large hand on her windpipe.
Mongol made him tap because of a forearm to the windpipe.
The man in the white coat howls as his windpipe closes.
Her windpipe narrowed as if she had something stuck in her throat.
He shoved me into the wall, choking my windpipe with his forearm.
In Kartagener syndrome, for example, immobile cilia in the windpipe cause breathing difficulties.
It's an injury that, in the Barry world, broke a man's windpipe last week.
She put the heel of her hand over my windpipe and everything went black.
Still barely able to breathe, physicians had to stick a tube down his windpipe.
Yet, when she spreads her lips, there is no sound; her windpipe is severed.
As your windpipe closes off, your throat expands to receive the delivery from your mouth.
I could feel it in my throat, like a chicken bone caught in my windpipe.
The flow of air can then push out objects in the windpipe that are causing choking.
A windpipe is whisked out, fingers are mangled, and fashion codes are thrown to the winds.
But Ronny finally collapses from the broken windpipe about 10 minutes into the 35-minute episode.
In order to insert a trach into a windpipe you have to bypass the vocal cords.
Which soulless human being sentenced a fellow human to await the slow obliteration of his windpipe?
But Dr. Heimlich believed those pushed an obstruction farther down in the windpipe, wedging it more tightly.
Since birth, he's breathed through a tracheostomy, a hole in his throat that extends into his windpipe.
"Let's see how you laugh without a windpipe," one lobbed-off head barked through planks of wood.
They line the inside surface of the windpipe, whipping in concert to drive foreign matter from the lungs.
Probably, but none of that will matter when a hunk of synthetic pop star is blocking your windpipe.
It contains two important tubes, the trachea, or windpipe, where air travels, and the esophagus, where food travels.
Say you want to 3D print a thin, hollow, or otherwise fragile object — like a replacement windpipe, for example.
The veteran comedian had an "abscess" at the top of her windpipe, which could result in two deadly possibilities.
A peanut allergy, for instance, can lead to inflammation in the windpipe, known as anaphylaxis, which can cause strangulation.
Air is delivered through a tube in the patient's windpipe into the lungs, mimicking the way we breathe naturally.
His windpipe was ruptured, and he had injuries to his carotid artery and to one of his vocal cords.
A CT scan found a 21-centimeter tumor in his chest, so big it was pressing on his windpipe.
Because when you swallow, food can slip into your windpipe and block airflow, causing you to choke or suffocate.
Meanwhile, other animals have a more sensible arrangement, where their windpipe and esophagus are far away from each other.
Those inches being the ones necessary to close off the champion's windpipe in Overeem's legendary but long absent guillotine choke.
However, any talk of nuptials was put on hold when doctors found an inoperable tumor on Eric's windpipe in 2014.
A "chokehold" is defined in the NYPD patrol guide as "any pressure to the throat or windpipe," which hinders breathing.
About two-thirds of Europe's oil was transported through the canal; Nasser had his "thumb on our windpipe," Eden fumed.
So you take it back, stick two fingers down that windpipe, and throw up that racialized reality in the toilet.
As they bloom, the tumors can tighten like a noose, constricting the windpipe and giving their victims a sensation of perpetual drowning.
A blocked windpipe often left a victim unable to breathe or talk, gesturing wildly to communicate distress that mimicked a heart attack.
There was no pressure on his windpipe but rather on the sides of his neck, which constituted a sleeper hold, they argued.
The doctors said they wanted to place a plastic tube down his windpipe but that the family had refused to allow the procedure.
Ronny, stoned and affronted, kicked him in the head, and after an ugly struggle Barry bashed his windpipe and left him for dead.
When you're lying down or sleeping and have a lot of postnasal drip, mucus can drain into your windpipe and lungs, Takashima says.
The inevitable conclusion: When Lester declined to sing any more novelty songs for Rondelay, the mobster's goons beat him (and apparently, crush his windpipe).
Most ventilators are sophisticated machines that keep critically ill people alive by delivering oxygen into the lungs through a tube inserted in the windpipe.
The most common cause of choking in children under 5 years old is food — their trachea, or windpipe, is roughly the diameter of a straw.
In June of 2015 he raised some brows by introducing his ten-finger guillotine or 'gogo choke' on the windpipe of the respectable Matt Mitrione.
A puff of air, a pulse of the lungs, rushes up the windpipe and through the vocal cords, parting them like a pair of lips.
Even when she did swallow, her reflex was as weak as a 240-year-old's and her epiglottis didn't always neatly seal off her windpipe.
Barry only just escapes, because early on, he breaks Ronny's windpipe, leaving the man gasping for breath, even as he all but renders Barry unconscious.
Few previous studies have examined the impact of obesity on breathing by looking at CT scans of the lungs and trachea, or windpipe, they note.
They find their way to a bodega, where he orders tuna salad on a bagel and immediately inhales enough of it to obstruct his windpipe.
Due to a hole in the dog's windpipe, air was getting caught under the pup's skin, causing him to balloon to three times his normal size.
Essentially, when you're choking, something has gotten stuck in your throat or your windpipe in a way that blocks off air from getting to your lungs.
Major high fives for knocking the popular guy in the windpipe after the girl fight is over and he has the nerve to ask her out.
Now, I moved faster than any transgenic or modded human, and crushed Rowley's windpipe before the splice could even draw his lysing pistols from their holsters.
He pointed out the killer's signature: the blood around the head; the tooth marks where he'd crimped the windpipe, suffocating it; the open cavity, intestines removed.
He was intubated, and later had a tracheostomy, a procedure in which a tube is surgically inserted into an opening in the windpipe to help with breathing.
The filtration and warming functions of the nasal mucus enable the air to be filtered and warmed before it reaches the trachea (windpipe) and eventually the lungs.
Geraldine had a breathing tube in her windpipe, a feeding tube in her stomach and an IV line in her neck, each an access road for bacteria.
Post-surgery CT scans showed reductions in air trapping and a lower incidence of tracheal collapse, or blockage in the windpipe that makes it harder to breathe.
Orta's video showed that Pantaleo had continued to apply pressure to Garner's windpipe after Garner was on the ground, subdued, and had repeatedly said that he couldn't breathe.
She was given a continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) machine and face mask—which blows air down a patient's windpipe to keep the airways open—and sent home.
Payne needed a tracheotomy, the placement of a tube in the windpipe, and was on a mechanical ventilator to help her breathe, Pesch said, but is doing much better.
Tonon pursued what Danaher calls a "high wrist" position, with his hand all the way through and up on the opponent's far clavicle rather than simple across the windpipe.
But the most gruesome part isn't even the kill: To get it down without suffocating, the python shoves its own windpipe out of its mouth like a feast-snorkel.
In September, Barkan had a tracheostomy, a surgical procedure that inserted a tube into his windpipe, which allowed him to breathe using a ventilator, and thus stay alive longer.
Place two fingers (but not your thumb — it has its own pulse) on your wrist or on the side of your neck, next to your windpipe, and locate your pulse.
The pressure caused by the air trapped under the dog's skin was released and the cause of the pup's puffed up appearance, the hole in his windpipe, was sewn shut.
The department defines a chokehold as  "any pressure to the throat or windpipe, which may prevent or hinder breathing or reduce intake of air," according to The New York Times.
Intubation, which involves inserting a plastic tube into a patient's windpipe, can lead to the virus becoming aerosolized, and more infectious to health care workers in the room, experts say.
Using this new setup, the scientists 3D printed an extremely thin-walled windpipe that took 24 hours to harden — time when it could have bent or collapsed without the organogel's support.
The epiglottis is a flap of tissue that sits at the back of your throat and closes over your windpipe when you're eating, so that food doesn't get into your airways.
But for birds, their chirps, squawks and tweets come from a specially-evolved organ called the syrinx, which is in the windpipe where it branches into the left and right lungs.
On one occasion, it said, they inserted the tube into his windpipe rather than his esophagus and poured the supplement into his lungs, making him feel like he was being drowned.
"When she got closer, she just bore down with her whole weight on the heel of her hand over my windpipe, and I just remember everything going black," Wilkins testified in Boulder, Colorado.
Because it was an unseasonably cool August day, Rachel wore a scarf, which got caught in one of the go-kart's axles, snapping her windpipe, an injury that left her without higher brain function.
The documentary suggested that the surgeon did not fully discuss potential risks with the patients, including a woman who received a synthetic windpipe in Krasnodar even though she did not have a life-threatening condition.
The parents – who Saunders says have a second daughter – traveled from Trinity, Alabama, to Cincinnati for their daughter's tracheal reconstructive surgery, according to AL.com, as the girl had been born with a too-narrow windpipe.
During this period of relaxation, says Khan, food contents from the stomach can dangerously regurgitate up into the patient's mouth and snake their way into the patient's trachea (windpipe) on their way to the lungs.
His group looked at several drugs: propofol, which puts people to sleep before they get general anesthesia; succinylcholine, used to relax muscles in the windpipe when a breathing tube must be inserted; and anesthetic gases.
It began with coughing fits that kept me (and my cellie) awake most of the night, and evolved into moments of pure terror, in which I was unable to draw a breath through my swollen windpipe.
He knew there was a reserve of air in the lungs, and reasoned that sharp upward thrusts on the diaphragm would compress the lungs, push air back up the windpipe and send the obstruction flying out.
Other than via tiny particles inhaled in air, coronavirus reaches those cells via fluid in the nose or throat that sneaks past your voice box (this is called aspiration) and slides down your windpipe, or trachea.
Checking a large goiter on the neck of a 42-year-old woman, they learned that it was pressing on her windpipe, meaning she would soon need surgery, even though she had no breathing problems yet.
FAMILY LEARNS TICK BITES CAN TRANSMIT MORE THAN LYME DISEASE Doctors had to perform a tracheotomy to help the man breathe - a procedure that involves them making an incision into his windpipe to allow air to pass through.
He literally lost his voice because of Richie (during a flashback in the pilot, we saw Lester being hit repeatedly in the windpipe by a bunch of hired goons sent to enforce his failure to fulfill a deal).
During the departmental trial, lawyers for Pantaleo argued that Garner's neck was in the crook of his elbow and there was no pressure on his windpipe but rather on the sides of his neck, constituting a sleeper hold.
As waves of infected memory cells are swept out of the lymph nodes and back into circulation, they get trapped in the final few inches of your respiratory system—the tissues that line the upper trachea, otherwise known as your windpipe.
According to WebMD, a bronchoscopy is a procedure in which "a doctor advances a flexible endoscope (bronchoscope) through a person's mouth or nose into the windpipe" to check the lungs, where they can also use tools to perform small procedures.
Common Sense Thomas O. Staggs, then the chief financial officer of the Walt Disney Company, was having lunch with Robert A. Iger and other high-ranking Disney executives in 2003 in the company's boardroom when food lodged in Mr. Iger's windpipe.
Joel says he dislodged a plastic bone on which Alfie was choking by pressing on his chest, massaging his esophagus and up the windpipe before broken pieces of a plastic bone came out of Alfie's mouth -- along with thick mucus and saliva.
Rothwell loves the uppercut so a panicked duck at his hips is a dangerous proposition anyway, but in his development of the wicked windpipe choke that he calls the 'gogo choke', Rothwell has made trying to take him down much more dangerous.
The country's state-run news agency KCNA published an article that said Pyongyang would strengthen its nuclear force and its "merciless sword of justice will cut off (South Korean President) Park Geun-hye's windpipe... despite her attempt to cling (to the) coattails of foreign forces."
Additionally, most patients sick enough to arrive at the ER will be elderly and frail, and will likely require intubation and breathing machines, a procedure in which my face, mouth, and eyes will be inches from theirs as I insert a breathing tube into their windpipe.
Custom-printed medical implants are already out there: a man received a 3D-printed replacement for a missing part of his skull a few years ago, and a 3D-printed tube shored up an infant's windpipe in 2012 after a birth defect left the child unable to breathe.
This is Trevor, a four-year-old dachshund who, ordinarily, looks like this: But recently, the Good Boy developed a bizarre health condition, causing a hole to open up in his windpipe, pumping air under his skin with each breath, and making him look like this: His owner, Fran Jennings, was quite understandably alarmed.
When an X-ray circulated online (courtesy of Australian blogger Angela Henderson) depicting a grape lodged in a child's windpipe, parents were shocked to see in such stark imagery just how dangerous a grape can be – and many were equally shocked to discover they still need to be cutting grapes lengthwise for their school-age children.
As the anesthesiologist took her position at the head of the bed to insert a breathing tube into Littlejohn's windpipe, a nurse cut off what remained of his blood-soaked clothes, another attached electrocardiogram sensors to his chest, and others performed chest compressions, took samples, passed the X-ray machine over his abdomen, and attached an I.V. line to his arm to begin delivering blood.
But repeating the words now didn't dull them, it called them to attention somehow, to service, it restored them, so that they became difficult to say again; I found myself almost unable to speak as I whispered into R.'s silence, kissing the soft flesh of his stomach, the firmer flesh over his ribs, his nipples and the patch of hair at the center of his chest, his collarbone, the taut skin at his windpipe.
Here is the red-bearded giant Alexei habitually tossing trussed-up boyars into a freezing river as punishment for their oversleeping his dawn church services; or Peter the Great having a beautiful ex-lover beheaded, then lifting her bloodied head, kissing it on the lips and lecturing the crowd on the windpipe and arteries; or the "Russian Venus" Elizaveta banning her ladies from wearing her favorite color, pink, then punishing a beauty who dared to wear a pink rose in her hair by having her tongue ripped out at a scaffold; or Catherine the Great, in the midst of a predawn revolution that would make her the ruler of Russia, commandeering a French hairdresser to fix her hair ("always important in a coup," notes the author with a rare flash of humor).

No results under this filter, show 102 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.