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23 Sentences With "windpipes"

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

Remember, when the work was made, sculptures and pedestals were as interdependent as windpipes and sound.
Tom Hardy's Bane, in the final Nolan film, achieves his malicious goals by crushing windpipes and smashing skulls.
"Class" is full of giggles suppressed, escaped and rising in windpipes, in response to lazy cracks about (say) Bill Cosby.
A survey of doctors in Japan found that 90% expected that patients with tubes inserted into their windpipes would never recover.
Fauci said whooping cough is most dangerous for infants because of their narrow windpipes, which can leave them more susceptible to complications from restricted breathing, one of the symptoms of the infection.
Dr. Lendahl was among a group of Karolinska professors who in 2010 recommended the hiring of Paolo Macchiarini, a surgeon who performs experimental transplants involving plastic windpipes embedded with a patient's own stem cells.
The red flags were there from the beginning The doctor at the center of the scandal is an Italian surgeon named Paolo Macchiarini, who developed and transplanted bioengineered windpipes grown from patients' own stem cells.
"The probe officer was told by mothers that the hospital did not insert oxygen pipes (into infants' windpipes) after birth, and proper medication was also not given," police said in the complaint, quoting the government report.
Lastly, healthy people have a robust system for transporting the aspirated viruses and bacteria up the windpipes and dropping it in the esophagus, where it is swallowed and begins to be digested with the saliva we make.
Dr. Macchiarini, who has performed highly experimental transplants of plastic windpipes embedded with patients' own stem cells, has been considered a pioneer in the field of regenerative medicine, which has the goal of producing replacement tissues and organs.
In a petri dish, researchers looked at how cinnamaldehyde—a compound responsible for the taste and smell of cinnamon that's commonly used in flavored e-cigarette liquid—affected human cells taken from the surface of our windpipes leading up to the lungs.
If the "planned fire of power demonstration" is carried out because of U.S. recklessness, Kim said it will be "the most delightful historic moment when the Hwasong artillerymen will wring the windpipes of the Yankees and point daggers at their necks," the news agency reported.
"If the planned fire of power demonstration is carried out as the US is going more reckless, it will be the most delightful historic moment when the Hwasong artillerymen will wring the windpipes of the Yankees and point daggers at their necks," the report said.
Meanwhile, Arthur wakes up, follows the men's trail and discovers the valley. He kills two tribesmen and notices an object embedded in their windpipes. After cutting one out, he realizes that it acts as a whistle. He blows on it, luring another tribesman close, then kills him.
When one looks up at a nyūdō-bōzu, it would gnaw at people's windpipes and kill them. It is said that since the weasel stomps on the shoulder of the person it is trying to fool, if one does not get startled and grasps that leg and stomps it on the ground, it would be possible to exterminate the nyūdō-bōzu. In Nagano Prefecture, it is said that their true form is considered to be a tanuki or mujina, and in Miyagi Prefecture, a mujina.
These organs, called pseudotracheae, because of some resemblance to the tracheae (windpipes) of air-breathing organisms, are lung-like and present within the pleopods (back legs) of isopods. The structure of the pseudotracheae has been compared to the spongy structure of the eurypterid gill tracts. It is possible the two organs functioned in the same way. Some researchers have suggested that eurypterids may have been adapted to an amphibious lifestyle, using the full gill tract structure as gills and the invaginations within it as pseudotrachea.
Yarrell states that Fussell drew "nearly five hundred" of the 520 wood-engravings mentioned on the book's title-page. The work began in 1837 and continued for six years, Yarrell publishing at the rate of one instalment, containing three sheets, every two months. Many of the drawings were from skins or stuffed specimens, though every bird species is illustrated with a lifelike drawing of the bird standing (or rarely, flying or swimming) in a natural setting. Additional drawings depict nests, feathers, and details of bird anatomy including feet, breastbones, and windpipes.
Many of the drawings were from skins or stuffed specimens, though every bird species is illustrated with a lifelike drawing of the bird standing (or rarely, flying or swimming) in a natural setting. Additional drawings depict nests, feathers, and details of bird anatomy including feet, breastbones, and windpipes. Simon Holloway suggests that Fussell and the engravers Charles Thompson and sons probably made all the illustrations for the first three editions of Yarrell's Birds. Only in the fourth, rewritten edition of 1871–85 were illustrations by other artists (Charles Whymper, J. G. Keulemans, Edward Neale) added.
Jake Feldman is a fur trader who desperately wants to have sex with a stripper named Shanna, who has no interest in him. One of his suppliers, Jeb Jameson and his son, go onto private land owned by an old woman known as "Mother Mater," to trap animals. They find each trap containing a raccoon, and Jameson schools his son on the proper way to kill them: crush their windpipes with a boot, and if they survive, crush their skulls with a baseball bat. After processing, all of the raccoon pelts are perfect, and Jameson calls Feldman to arrange a sale.
The calumet stems > represented windpipes as well as arrow shafts, and the combination of > windpipe and lungs was believed to introduce a quickening breath into the > nose of the adoptee that then descended into his chest and gave him life. > Logically, the name He-who-is-hit-with-deer-lungs could derive from a ritual > in which an impersonator of He-who-wears-human-heads-as-earrings was > symbolically requickened with the calumets.Hall (1997) 151. Pressing this > line of argument, Hall connects this name to the Bi-Lobed Arrow Motif of the > SECC, arguing that it may be a graphic depiction of the ceremonial pipe.
Alms is the continuation of Ma's reflection upon religious life since Aeolian Garden at UMOCA in 2005, a work consisting of brass windpipes installed under the medieval bridge of San Francesco in the Tuscan town of Colle di Val d'Elsa, creating an atmospheric soundscape. The bridge, initially built to lead people from daily life to religious refuge, "can once again serve as a conduit for contemplation and reflection." The work remains part of the town's cultural patrimony. While Alms and Aeolian Garden do call for the coexistence of religions and the peace of mind, the idea of dissonance is another running theme of Ma's early works.
A 24 set pipe mechanical Hook and Hastings organA 24 set pipe mechanical Hook and Hastings organ,A 24 set pipe mechanical Hook and Hastings organ built in Boston, MA in 1888, was acquired for the Church at a cost of $ 250.000 and restored to working condition. It was one of only two in the Country that operated on the basis of windpipes and remains one of the oldest working pipe organs on the west coast. It is attributed to be the only extant mechanical organ in San Francisco which has been designated as a Landmark by the National Historical Organ Society which is headquartered in Boston, MA.
The pen for the remaining drawings, if any (the title page asserts there are 520 in the book), is not stated. As well as the figures of birds, there are 59 tail-pieces (following Bewick, small woodcuts to fill in the spaces at ends of articles), of which some are whimsical, like Bewick's, but many illustrate anatomical details, especially breastbones and windpipes, and others, although decorative, realistically depict aspects of bird behaviour or human interaction with birds. For example, the tail-piece for the "Jack Snipe" shows a bittern among reeds, swallowing a frog, while that for the "Common Bittern" shows "a mode of shooting an Eagle from a pit". Fussell's work began in 1837 and continued for six years.

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