wheeze - use in sentences

Converse of object

  • have: A year or two ago many well known lenders had a nice little wheeze going.

Object

  • tightness: This means salmeterol is used to prevent asthma attacks, wheezing, chest tightness or shortness of breath, rather than to relieve them.
  • illness: Longitudinal studies demonstrate that maternal smoking is associated with an increased incidence of wheezing illness, particularly at younger ages.
  • noise: A strange wheezing noise was heard near the window end of the room, rather like someone struggling for breath.
  • attack: Incidence is also used to describe the frequency of events such as wheezing attacks and hospital admissions.
  • sound: Once a child does sleep alone, caregivers should hear no snoring or other wheezing sounds at night.

Adjective modifier

  • jolly: If writing games is such a jolly wheeze why is playing them so moronic?
  • wizard: Rob and John, for example, are planning the wizard wheeze of jumping from the roof of London's Park Lane Hilton.
  • recurrent: Recurrent wheeze is often interpreted as asthma, but asthma is by no means the only cause of wheeze.
  • clever: It may seem to be an awfully clever wheeze to some Whitehall spin doctor to " bury bad news " in this way.
  • late: His latest wheeze is to turn his police officers into bounty hunters by awarding them " points for pulls " .
  • good: However it did give rise to a rather good wheeze.

Preposition: with

  • breathlessness: In this age group, young enough to make the diagnosis of COPD unlikely, the principal cause of wheeze with breathlessness is asthma.

Preposition: in

  • childhood: This might help to explain the link between RSV bronchiolitis and wheezing in later childhood.

The word usage examples above have been gathered from various sources to reflect current and historical usage. They do not represent the opinions of YourDictionary.com.