well when my mom was sick and had a bad sneeze she sneezed 20-50 times in a row and im serious
To the gentleman who posted above me, after much deliberating thought my comrade and I have decided your 20-50 sneezes is nothing more than a fallacy. We believe the individual in question, (your mother in this case) would suffer from lack of oxygen, potentially causing a fatal result.
We have decided to take this investigation further and write myth busters with a request of affirmation.
Sincerely,
T+G
The record for most consecutive sneezes is held by Donna Griffiths from the UK, who sneezed 978 times in a row over the course of 1 hour.
Oh, dude, the record for most sneezes in a row is like... wait for it... drumroll... 976 sneezes! Can you imagine sneezing almost a thousand times in a row? I'd be like, "Bless you" on repeat for days!
3.
it depends how you sneeze. everyone sneezes differently
In China, Vietnam and Japan, for instance, there is a superstition that if talking behind someone's back causes the person being talked about to sneeze; as such, the sneezer can tell if something good is being said (one sneeze), something bad is being said (two sneezes in a row), even if someone is in love with them (three sneezes in a row) or if this is a sign that they are about to catch a cold (multiple sneezes).
It is often referred to as the row header or row heading or row number.
In most A310 airline configurations, row number 31 (seat 31D, 31E & 31F) is the final rear most row of the cabin (all 3 are middle seats between the 2 aisles)
No it does not. However, there will most likely be a release of gas.
Most of the time you get the flu is when someone sneezes on you of if someone coughs on you
approx. 200 times a year according to abc news http://abcnews.go.com/Health/ColdandFluNews/Story?id=6479792&page=1
Sneezes originate from the nose.
The row number describes the period. It signifies the number of shells.