Pretend you're choking, then try to spell the sounds you make. Everybody does it differently.
**added - I use "ACK" or "GACK"
The sound of a sneeze can be written as "achoo," "achoo," or "atchoo."
Yes, "choke" is considered an onomatopoeia because it imitates the sound associated with the action of choking or gasping for breath. The word itself sounds like the sound someone might make while struggling to breathe.
I'm guessing you would like to see how the two words 'you sound' are used in a sentence? The word 'sound' can be a verb, or an action that causes a sound to be made. eg: Can you sound the horn to let them know we are here. (This could be said by a passenger in a car talking to the driver). The word can also be the way you express your opinion on the sound a person is making. eg: You sound terrible, perhaps you have caught a cold? (One person talking to another).
The root word for "sound" is "sonus" from Latin, while the root word for "write" is "scribere," also from Latin.
The sound spellings are rarely used, but may be "phoo" or "whoo."
Slapping a person in the back when they are choking can help, but it can also cause injury. The Heimlich maneuver is always best when a person is choking.
What you do is you lie the person on their side which is meant to stop them choking. I think that's what you do!
Choking is a medical emergency. When a person is choking, air cannot reach the lungs. If the airways cannot be cleared, death follows rapidly.
A choking squirrel XD
Red face (after a while gets blue), bulging eyes, hands around neck, swelling of blood vessels on neck. There are two types of choking: foreign object fully blocking the airway or a partial block of the airway. When there is a full block of the airway, the person will not be able to produce any sound. If the blocking is only partial, wheezing sound will be heard. Causes for choking other than foreign objects: allergic reactions, asthma
Choking
An unobstructed airway.
Diagnosing choking due to mechanical obstruction is straightforward, since the symptoms are obvious even to an untrained person.
In choking due to infection, the person, usually a child, will have a fever and signs of illness before labored breathing begins.
The choking game is a game where a person intentionally cuts off oxygen to the brain. The goal of cutting oxygen off to the brain is that the person may gain a sense of euphoria.
Abdominal thrusts, also known as the Heimlich maneuver, should be given just above the navel on the person's abdomen in case of choking.
The slang verb "barf" is apparently imitative of the sound of retching, and possibly "puke" is as well. A common sound effect in cartoons is "blarggh" (extended form of choking sound blarg).