0 the tube in the body that carries air that has been breathed in from the upper end of the throat to the lungs:
1 the tube in the body that carries air that has been breathed in from the upper end of the throat to the lungs
Most of the words in the list seemed totally innocuous consider the last ten: windpipe, wire-drawer, witchery, woe, wooden, wooly, worrier, wren, wrong, young.
Suctioning infected material from your windpipe was tolerated for only a few seconds at a time.
When we swallow food or drink, a lid called the epiglottis usually comes down over the trachea to prevent food from falling in and blocking the windpipe.
It is a foot on the windpipe of the local economy.
That has not happened, but in the meantime the real problem of trade—the stranglehold of the windpipe—has continued.
It sticks to the windpipe of its victim and infects the lungs.
In pursuing sanctions, it seems that we are going for the windpipe of a society, but, in spite of events, some graduates are still full of potential good will.
Although his windpipe was torn and obstructed by his destroyed larynx, the condemned man continued with rasping breaths and convulsed on the rope.