- 看过 suffocate 的人也看了 :
- strangle
- drown
- asphyxiate
- smother
- stifle
suffocate 的 2 个定义
suf·fo·cat·ed, suf·fo·cat·ing.
suf·fo·cat·ed, suf·fo·cat·ing.
suffocate 近义词
choke
更多suffocate例句
- They pay in having to cope with sizzling health waves, powerful hurricanes, and suffocating wildfire smoke.
- Discovering that plants need sunlight to grow, or that fish will suffocate when taken out of water, requires no quantification of anything whatsoever.
- Scores of businesses in the city are suffocating as they delay their return to work or, worse, decide to work from home forever.
- We’ve read through quite a few letters about Zoom, suffocating family dinners, the role of sound and music, birthdays and anniversaries, and racially charged encounters.
- In industries where specific brand names have become synonymous with their original product, new brands can easily be suffocated out of the game.
- Her adopted daughter tried to suffocate a younger biological sibling.
- Somewhere in the theater, you also hear a soft, whimpering, “Help”—a woman is about to suffocate on her own tears.
- I hated that the town response to tragedy and suffering was to suffocate the afflicted family with attention.
- Yet the key development will hinge on sanctions aiming to suffocate the regime, a current point of division.
- Before You Suffocate Your Own Fool Selfby Danielle Evans A powerful short story collection from a rising star.
- As it was, ere he had time to suffocate, MacPherson was on the spot.
- They would first suffocate, and later their bodies would be swallowed up in the stomach of the earth.
- The gas emitted from this fissure is so strong that it would suffocate a person, holding his head near the ground.
- Insects do not easily suffocate, and it is worse than useless, in the majority of cases, to punch air-holes in such boxes.
- Many females in fact cry out at those times, that something has broken in the throat, and they fear they are going to suffocate.