What's the difference between wheely and wheezy?

Wheely


Definition:

  • (a.) Circular; suitable to rotation.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The results of this analytical study of wheelchair wheelie performance can be summarized into two wheelchair design equations, or rules of thumb, as developed in the paper.
  • (2) Snap – they're my photos 8 Extreme Mountain Unicycling This is wheely dangerous, said a spokesman … 9 How to win Chess in 4 moves Pawn movie 10 Dog Jumps Over A River Cute – you'll want to stream this video Source: Viral Video Chart .
  • (3) Wheelie balance is the other aspect of performance considered; where the user balances the wheelchair on the rear wheels for going down curbs or just for fun.
  • (4) Thus, a simple test of determining the shortest length of rod one can balance in the palm of the hand (plus measuring handrim force capability and simple reaction time) may indicate if a wheelchair user will find it easy to do a wheelie balance.
  • (5) The former wheelchair basketball player, British junior powerlifting champion, tennis contender (he reached 69th in the world), l eading face of the famous BBC ident (featuring three wheelchair dancers, spinning and doing wheelies) actor and TV presenter is visiting the tiny terrace road where he grew up in Newham, east London.
  • (6) And one of those wheelie suitcases, the Trunki, I liked that too.
  • (7) People were smoking heroin in the open in the yard, bubbling up hooch in wheelie bins, taking ecstasy.
  • (8) The wheelie bins overflowed into the courtyard every single week.
  • (9) About five minutes after wiping the sweat from her brow and drop-kicking her placenta into a nearby wheelie bin, she stuck on a tabard and poached enough cleaning clients to buy all the bum cream her little heart desired.
  • (10) Yeah if I don’t take insulin for three days … you’d a had to carry me out in a wheelie bin,” he said.
  • (11) However, balancing a rod is done primarily by using visual perception, whereas wheelie balance involves human joint proprioceptors and visual plus vestibular (inner ear) perception.
  • (12) He had strapped a pink and purple umbrella to a small wheelie suitcase that held, he said, his “whole kit and caboodle”.
  • (13) Phil Mitchell’s Rock Bottom sounds like a tip for the 2.15 at Lingfield, but as he realised the pink wheelie suitcase buried beneath the rubble belonged to his runaway daughter Louise, he hit it hard.
  • (14) Three men on motorcycles arrived and performed death-defying wheelies.
  • (15) The equation containing the significant parameters involved in popping a wheelie for curb climbing is: fh = 0.8 mg theta c.g.
  • (16) Tensions were still high: wheelie bins were set on fire, a police van was attacked with bricks, a female officer was injured, and a police dog bit a 14-year-old boy.
  • (17) Timothy’s passion is industrial strategy, Godfrey specialises in pensions, housing and longterm care – while one of few survivors from the Cameron era, special adviser Sheridan Westlake, who famously persuaded Eric Pickles to focus on the unglamorous issues that suburban voters cared about, such as the Daily Mail obsession with wheelie bins .
  • (18) It can be used for a variety of jobs from cleaning cars and bikes to patios, decking, fences, guttering, garden furniture and even smelly wheelie bins.
  • (19) I've even seen a picture of a giant wheely trash can in pepto bismol pink with a ribbon on it.
  • (20) A couple of minutes from now, I'll be trundling my little wheelie suitcase out of the door, stepping into a taxi for one last interview while being driven back to obscurity.

Wheezy


Definition:

  • (a.) Breathing with difficulty and with a wheeze; wheezing. Used also figuratively.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) In patients three years of age or less, M. pneumoniae was isolated at the same rate from febrile and afebrile cases and from wheezy and non-wheezy cases.
  • (2) Recurrent croup was significantly associated with a patient history of asthma and wheezy bronchitis and a family history of croup.
  • (3) The risk factors for wheezy bronchitis were the same as for infections, indicating that wheezy bronchitis is closely related to infections.
  • (4) The effect of nebulised salbutamol on the bronchial response to nebulised histamine was studied in five wheezy infants aged 3-12 months.
  • (5) The effect of an oral slow-release aminophylline preparation (Phyllocontin Continus tablets) in preventing early morning reduction in airway calibre was measured in two groups of asthmatic patients; Group I consisted of eight stable asthmatics whose main complaint was nocturnal wheeziness, and Group II comprised four severe asthmatics studied during the period of recovery from an acute exacerbation of asthma.
  • (6) The sex ratio of asthmatic and wheezy children was very similar in the two countries.
  • (7) A 9-month-old girl with 4 months history of recurrent wheezy bronchitis, dysphagia and pneumonia, had impacted, radiolucent oesophageal foreign body (nipple).
  • (8) Forty-eight wheezy infants were followed up for 25 to 44 months.
  • (9) Respirosonography provides a noninvasive method for objective clinical assessment of young, wheezy children.
  • (10) These observations suggest that under conditions of forced expiration intrathoracic airways function may be further impaired by nebulised bronchodilator treatment in wheezy infants.
  • (11) The results of the present study raise serious doubts about the advisability of sedation with chloral hydrate, in the currently used doses, in wheezy infants.
  • (12) The response of the bronchi to nebulised salbutamol was measured in five recurrently wheezy infants.
  • (13) Those with perennial rhinitis were more likely to have past or current eczema or migraine, be wheezy or labelled asthmatic, or have a family history of nose trouble other than hayfever.
  • (14) After multiple logistic regression analysis was used to control for paternal smoking, social status, sex, family allergy, crowding, breast-feeding, gas cooking and heating, and bedroom dampness, the association of maternal smoking with childhood wheezy bronchitis persisted.
  • (15) While no effect on respiratory function has been demonstrated, a recent study has reported a fall in oxygen saturation (SaO2) following sedation in wheezy infants.
  • (16) A virus was isolated in 146 (26.4%) of 554 episodes of wheezy bronchitis, rhinoviruses accounting for almost half of the isolations.
  • (17) Lower airway responses to nebulised bronchodilators were studied in 18 chronically or recurrently wheezy infants, aged 3-15 months, by means of partial forced expiratory flow-volume manoeuvres performed with an inflatable jacket.
  • (18) Children consulting trainers for recurrent wheezy chest after those doctors had set a standard for that condition improved both in drug compliance (79% (n = 33) before standard setting v 93% (30) after) and mean number of days of breathlessness (3.8 (SE 1.0) before v 1.7 (0.6) after) and wheeziness (4.7 (0.9) before v 1.8 (0.6) after), compared with those consulting doctors who had not (compliance 74% (144) before v 72% (146) after; breathlessness 2.4 (0.4) before v 2.3 (0.3) after; wheeziness 3.0 (0.4) before v 2.7 (0.4) after).
  • (19) Fourteen months later the recurrence of wheeziness attacks--that is, asthma--was investigated.
  • (20) It is effective in conjunction with beta-agonists in acute severe childhood asthma and has an important role in the management of wheezy infants and in chronic lung disease of prematurity (bronchopulmonary dysplasia).

Words possibly related to "wheely"

Words possibly related to "wheezy"