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Перевод: suffocation
[существительное] удушение; задушение; удушье [существительное]
Тезаурус:
- Colds descend and produce hoarseness then rawness of the trachea, then to the chest with suffocation and a great accumulation of mucus but there is an expulsive power to the cough (unlike in Antimonium tartaricum ).
- Whales enmeshed in a drift-net are condemned to a slow death from starvation or suffocation.
- Bronchitis of children with coarse rattling, coughing, gagging and a sense of suffocation, weight and anxiety in the chest, after a rapid onset and they look dreadfully sick, drawn and pale; the condition has come on rapidly.
- Bronchitis of children with coarse rattling, coughing, gagging and a sense of suffocation
- Suffocation perhaps, or not enough insulation?
- Do they not find there (I know I do) just that suffocation Olson speaks of?
- They wake with this sense of suffocation and must sit up and bend forward or else must rush to the open window; they feel they must take a deep breath.
- Dry, teasing, hacking cough with a sense of suffocation.
- Since the Emperor was always cold, he kept a fire burning in his own rooms even during the height of summer, so that ministers had to conduct business in an atmosphere of near suffocation.
- Suffocation or unconsciousness.
- Dyspnoea; they wake from sleep with a sense of suffocation, a sense of choking which can come on in the first sleep, a sense of strangulation when lying and especially when anything is around the neck; neck is very sensitive to touch.
- Constriction felt in the throat, larynx or chest with the spasmodic cough, can hardly get any breath; suffocation with the spasms in the chest and larynx and the constant violent paroxysms of coughing, worse () lying down.
- Some eruptions have become major historical events, since many of the world's greatest natural disasters have been associated with volcanoes, either directly through the effects of explosions and suffocation by volcanic gases, or indirectly through the much further-reaching effects of tidal waves triggered off by an eruption, such as those resulting from the great eruption of Krakatoa in 1883.
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