Yes. Just about everyone sneezes mostly out of their mouth.
I cannot see anything wrong with this answer?
He Sneezed in front of president. This is one of many examples for sentence use.
The flowers made her sneeze.You'll sneeze if you put too much pepper on your food.Cover your nose and mouth when you sneeze or you'll spread germs.He heard a sneeze from the next room. The house was supposed to be empty.
Chalk dust can make people sneeze for the same reason regular dust does. What happens is when you breathe in dust, the tiny particles of it get stuck to the mucus coating the inside of your nose. If there's enough dust, it can irritate the mucous membranes inside your nose. When the membrane's irritated, you suddenly feel an intense tickle inside your nose, which triggers your sneeze reflex. When you sneeze, air is forcefully blasted out of your mouth and nose, helping to get rid of what was that made you sneeze.
Air enters the the respiratory tract through either the nose or mouth.
He had started to sneeze as his cold got worse.
A cough or sneeze.
Don't stop it. Just let the sneeze come out through your mouth. This is actually how most people naturally sneeze.
It is approximated, that there is about 0.3 Joules of energy in a sneeze. A sneeze refers to a convulsive expulsion of the air from the lungs through the nose and mouth.
It's possible, but definitely not recommended. A sneeze is supposed to send a certain amount of air through your nose, and the rest is supposed to flow out of your mouth. If you block your mouth, too much air can be forced through your nasal passages, potentially damaging them, along with your ears. It's best to sneeze forcefully and naturally through both your mouth and nose.
Cover my mouth.
Cover your mouth and nose when you sneeze.
It could be a scream, belch, a cough or sneeze.
When you let out a normal, healthy sneeze, it's naturally directed through both our mouth and our nose. While the majority of the air almost always comes from the mouth (which is where most of the ACHOO sound comes from), a good deal of it also goes through the nose, helping to blow out mucus and whatever else was in your nose. That's why your nose stops tickling after you sneeze. But I think sneezing also helps get things out of our lungs and throat too, which is why a lot of the air's from the mouth.
People will vomit through their mouth, but when it comes up through the esophagus in a rush it can be pushed up through the nose and therefore it can drip or spurt from your nose. *Another answer* It happened to me once, and caused me to have emetophobia.. its ruined my life and I havent vomited in 6 years..
Tens of thousands of tiny droplets fly out of your mouth when you sneeze, along with bits of mucus from your nose.
The correct spelling is "sneeze" (sternutation, convulsive exhalation through the nose and mouth).
You should cover your mouth, so that your sneeze droplets don't fly everywhere.