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Definition of Hyperventilate
1. Verb. Produce hyperventilation in. "The nurses had to hyperventilate the patient"
2. Verb. Breathe excessively hard and fast. "The mountain climber started to hyperventilate"
Definition of Hyperventilate
1. Verb. To breathe quickly and deeply ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Hyperventilate
1. [v -LATED, -LATING, -LATES]
Medical Definition of Hyperventilate
1. An increase in the rate or depth of breathing. Symptoms include rapid breathing, faintness or fainting, numbness around the mouth, fingertips or toes and cramping in the hands and fingers. (27 Sep 1997)
Lexicographical Neighbors of Hyperventilate
Literary usage of Hyperventilate
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Smoking & Health in the Americas: A 1992 Report of the Surgeon General, in by DIANE Publishing Company, Louis W. Sullivan (1995)
"They inhale deeply and hyperventilate; rarely do they retain a puff of smoke in
the mouth before expelling or swallowing it. The process is described as ..."
2. Access EPA: Public Information Tools (1994)
"... Title 40; recent Federal Register documents; Federal Register Air Quality
Designations; the Toxic Release Inventory and "Hyperventilate" an EPA software ..."
3. The U. S. Coal Industry, 1970-1990: Two Decades of Change (1992)
"Divers starting to hyperventilate should be asked to stop work and rest. Once on
the surface, holding the breath for short periods will aid in replenishing ..."
4. The Practices and Procedures of the Investigating Services of the Deparment edited by Strom Thurmond (1998)
"He wrestled from the third grade through high school and when an opponent would
illegally put a hold around his neck he would hyperventilate. ..."
5. Reviews in Environmental Health (1998): Toxicological Defense Mechanics edited by Gary E. R. Hook, George W. Lucier (2000)
"I'm really scared of this one doctor, and a lot of times he's in [the dream]...!
hyperventilate, and I can't breathe, and I have stomach spasms, ..."
6. Confessions at Any Cost: Police Torture in Russia by Diederik Lohman (1999)
"Subsequently, the oxygen supply is cut; at this point, in many cases, police beat
the suspect, causing him to hyperventilate. Some victims reported losing ..."
7. Navy Seal Physical Fitness Guide edited by Patricia A. Deuster (1998)
"The following rules apply to underwater swim training: + DO NOT hyperventilate
prior to your underwater swim. + Use a buddy to observe during pool drills. ..."