They're designed to 'irritate' the patient's airways - so, yes - if inhaled in sufficient quantity, they'll cause certainly coughing.
The main reason pepper makes us sneeze is that it has a coating on it of a chemical called piperine. This is the chemical that makes pepper spicy. When pepper gets inside your nose, this chemical really irritates its lining, triggering your sneeze reflex to expel it. A secondary reason it might make you sneeze is that pepper is usually ground up into tiny bits, which can get in your nose and make you sneeze for the same reason as things like dust.
Use a magnet to separate the iron, Add the reaming mixture to water, the salt will dissolve, the pepper will float and the sand will sink- separate the pepper from the surface, filter the solution to retrieve the sand then evaporate the water to get the salt
If you smell anything, you're most likely smelling the thousands of saliva droplets that the sneeze just sprayed out.
No they can not.. It is air born but it has to be from a sneeze or cough
her cat sneeze
Because when you sneeze the sound you make is "SNEEZE!" ^No, it really isn't. I've not heard one person say "SNEEZE" when they sneeze, ever in my life. I've heard people say "Achoo", "Atishoo" and other ones, but never "SNEEZE".
Pepper, dust, and even cold air are compounds that can cause a person to sneeze. Any compound that irritates the lining of the nostrils can cause a sneeze.
Yes, sneezes is the third person singular form of the verb sneeze. It is also the plural form of the noun sneeze.
Allergies could cause a person to cough or sneeze whenever a cat is around them.
Yes you do sneeze when you have a tissue so you can wipe your nose. If your asking directly to me sometimes i sneeze when i have a tissue. I don't think that's like a kind of health condition or anything.
u sneeze on your hand and shake the person hand and sneeze agin but on them.
Impossible to answer ! On most occasions, we sneeze because something has irritated the lining of the nose - therefore, a person might not sneeze once in a day. On the other hand - someone with flu may sneeze a hundred times in a single day.
A sneeze is caused by the muscular and nervous system working together.
The two systems involved in sneezing when smelling pepper are the olfactory system and the trigeminal system. The olfactory system detects the scent of pepper, while the trigeminal system responds to irritants in the nasal passages, triggering a sneeze as a reflex to expel the irritant. This reaction is often heightened by the strong volatile compounds found in pepper, which can irritate the nasal mucosa.