Are you sneezing into the wind or indoors? Are you sneezing uphill or downhill? These are all factors on sneeze distance. :)
The real answer is that once you sneeze, your germs become airborne and can travel for miles.
2 feet
about 6 feet.
As far as i know,it travels approximately 150mph
it reach far far in
Cover your face, now... a sneeze. Incidentally, when you sneeze, it is impossible for you to keep your eyes open by force of will. Your eyes will close.
Yes, because sprays can reach up to 120 miles per hour.
Up to I believe 4 feet, and at a speed of at least 60 mph.
A simple sneeze spray an average of 40,000 droplets of saliva and mucous but some sneezes can go up to about 60,000 to 120,000 droplets. It lingers around in the air for about 12 hours and you also might smell your own sneeze. The air from a sneeze can travel 10 ft away but the wet spray travels and infects people 5 ft away. Simple sneeze: Achoo!= 40,000 droplets Wet sneeze: Ha-Isshhoo!= 60,000 to 120,000 droplets happy sneezing
quite a lot a sneeze which is disease can spread very quickly very far so that's why we put our hands or tissue over our mouth when we sneeze so it doesn't spread and people don't get infected by any kind of disease
If you sneeze on a Tuesday, you will kiss a stranger. The whole rhyme goes: If you sneeze on Monday, you sneeze for danger; Sneeze on a Tuesday, kiss a stranger; Sneeze on a Wednesday, sneeze for a letter; Sneeze on a Thursday, something better; Sneeze on a Friday, sneeze for sorrow; Sneeze on a Saturday, see your sweetheart to-morrow.
Cover Your Mouth!The spray radius of a sneeze is 15 feet. A sneeze is a reflex response using the muscles of the face, throat and,chest,releasing up to 40,000 droplets...The droplets of a sneeze can travel as fast as 150 feet a second, so If a sneeze takes a little less than a tenth of a second then the answer would be around 15ft, I'd guesstimate the maximum straight line projection at 12 ft.
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".
sleeve