How to Use wheeze in a Sentence

wheeze

1 of 2 verb
  • The car's motor wheezed and stalled.
  • He was up all night hacking and wheezing.
  • About 30 cadets stepped out of big vans and at least one wheezed at the stench.
    Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs, baltimoresun.com, 18 June 2018
  • In the wee hours of the medieval night, a monk begins to wheeze and cry in fear.
    Veronique Greenwood, Scientific American, 19 June 2018
  • The two duked it out for a round, with the larger Trafton holding the edge, then danced and wheezed for the remainder of the fight.
    Will Larkin, chicagotribune.com, 8 Aug. 2019
  • As the living, wheezing Ailes, Crowe carries the weight in different styles, to vary the mood.
    Troy Patterson, The New Yorker, 30 June 2019
  • As the shot clock wheezed while holding a 3-point lead and 25 seconds left, Bradley rose up for a 3 and was fouled by Jaylon Scott.
    Bryce Miller, San Diego Union-Tribune, 16 Mar. 2023
  • But all of us are likely to feel the effects of a sick and wheezing economy.
    Jarvis Deberry, cleveland, 18 Apr. 2020
  • As lunch nears, the cutting boards patter, the steamers wheeze, but nothing ever roars above the woks.
    Casey Quackenbush / Hong Kong, Time, 12 July 2018
  • The little house on Prairie Road rattled and wheezed as the wind ripped through its small rooms and narrow hallways with the roar of a thousand freight trains.
    Martin Kuz, San Antonio Express-News, 9 Apr. 2018
  • Instead, it’s gone the other way, and the Huskies are wheezing to the finish line at 6-5 going into the Apple Cup.
    Dan Wolken, USA TODAY, 24 Nov. 2019
  • When her daughter started wheezing, Sainz stopped taking her to the park.
    Erin Stone, azcentral, 31 Dec. 2019
  • Sometimes, asthma symptoms can be mild and make a person wheeze or cough.
    Jen Christensen, CNN, 20 Sep. 2017
  • Hit with all kinds of injuries - even one player got shingles - FSU wheezed and gasped to find momentum.
    Ron Higgins, NOLA.com, 16 June 2017
  • The room was small and dimly lit, with pocked floors, bare walls, and a fold-out table littered with empty juice bottles; a small pink fan wheezed in the corner.
    Jonathan Blitzer, The New Yorker, 3 Oct. 2019
  • Special economic zones and tax reform are among the wheezes his wonks propose.
    The Economist, 15 Aug. 2019
  • And then his breathing turned to heaving, which became wheezing, until he was slumped over on the steering wheel.
    Bryan Washington, The New Yorker, 29 Aug. 2023
  • The orchestra’s performance wheezed to a halt, much to the audience’s chagrin.
    Peter Vanham, Fortune Europe, 8 Nov. 2023
  • Amir began wheezing at night — once so badly that an ambulance was called — and woke up most mornings to find his eyes swollen shut with rheum.
    Hannah Natanson, Washington Post, 9 July 2018
  • Ron would wheeze while hiking, and sometimes at night, but a nebulizer made his breathing less strained.
    Patrick Hruby, Washington Post, 30 Aug. 2021
  • And then the Penguin pops in again, snorting and wheezing and ruining everything.
    Scott Meslow, GQ, 7 Feb. 2018
  • Valerian wheezes to a close and then gives us a sloppy, oafish grin, one that, much like an ugly dog, both endears and repulses.
    Jillian Selzer, Cosmopolitan, 24 July 2017
  • The billowing smoke emanated from Indonesia, which wheezed its way through its worst fire season in more than 15 years.
    Aaron Sidder, National Geographic, 1 Aug. 2016
  • After watching his team clank and wheeze in the first half against the Rockets, punctuated by a fumble-finger Green pass to a surprised fan in the third row, Kerr called a timeout.
    Michael Powell, New York Times, 29 May 2018
  • That may help explain the desperation to get ahead, manifested by their factcheckUK wheeze.
    The Economist, 21 Nov. 2019
  • Besides, listening to co-workers sneeze and wheeze is a distraction.
    Rhett Power, chicagotribune.com, 1 Nov. 2019
  • Kajal is banished from his mother’s bed to sleep in the room alongside his moaning, wheezing grandmother.
    Jessica Kiang, Variety, 7 Oct. 2023
  • Like a stock car that ran out of gas in the final stretch of a race, Alabama wheezed and coughed at the end of its regular season before suffering a miserable fate.
    Rainer Sabin, AL.com, 3 Mar. 2018
  • As the rumbling engine wheezed to a stop, a hush fell over the bus’ interior, and its quivering floor suddenly stopped vibrating.
    Dominic Fracassa, SFChronicle.com, 2 Oct. 2019
  • Hemmed in by fast-growing condo developments, crumbling older houses, and the clang and wheeze of light industry, the park at Hannah and Peralta streets feels like an oasis.
    Andrew Simmons, San Francisco Chronicle, 27 Apr. 2018
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wheeze

2 of 2 noun
  • We can count on him for a good wheeze.
  • Between gasps and wheezes, he tried to explain what had happened.
  • Yet all this pageantry was the wheeze of a dying world.
    The Economist, 2 Jan. 2020
  • Or is this all just a teenage wheeze to escape boredom?
    Tony Lacy-Thompson, The Mercury News, 18 May 2017
  • That was a place where a plucky playoff dream goes to wheeze its final breaths.
    Bryce Miller, San Diego Union-Tribune, 25 Mar. 2023
  • The loud wheeze of air brakes proceeds a concussive thud.
    Los Angeles Times, 1 Mar. 2022
  • The latest wheeze is charging fans 400 rupees to meet him.
    The Economist, 13 Sep. 2019
  • Blunt, 38, has this past year to thank for the fear that every little rasp or wheeze could be a sign of the pandemic.
    Nick Romano, EW.com, 14 May 2021
  • Sometimes, Columba Sainz can't sleep, her ears pricked for the sound of a wheeze or a cough from her young daughter's room.
    AZCentral.com, 29 Oct. 2020
  • There's a zingy wheeze when this engine revs up, but there's good power when it's prodded.
    Mike Sutton, Car and Driver, 7 Jan. 2020
  • The coughs to clear my throat became involuntary and more violent, with the whistling rattle of a wheeze.
    Vann R. Newkirk Ii, The Atlantic, 5 July 2017
  • Breathing is a huge issue for people with obesity — there’s sometimes a rattle and a wheeze in the lungs.
    Tim Grierson, Los Angeles Times, 27 Feb. 2023
  • An organ was being tuned onstage, letting out a fluteish wheeze.
    New York Times, 19 July 2022
  • This was a questionable wheeze even when European airports lobbied for it in the 1950s.
    The Economist, 27 Feb. 2021
  • Sixty people cough and wheeze inside the clinic’s tiny waiting room.
    Rebecca Curtis, The New Yorker, 9 Nov. 2020
  • The policemen’s conversation kept coming through, as did the drunken shouts, the squeak of shoes on the floor, the wheeze of an automatic door, the slap of a hand on the button that opened it, the knock of a bed against it.
    Timothy Snyder, The New York Review of Books, 3 Sep. 2020
  • Not that the film, directed by Lizzie Gottlieb, Robert’s daughter, is some whimsical wheeze about two codgers trying to eke out a last hurrah.
    Peter Rainer, The Christian Science Monitor, 4 Jan. 2023
  • Or heard a lithium battery wheeze its last, horrifying breath?
    Eli Burnstein, The New Yorker, 1 Sep. 2021
  • Others worry that the bankruptcy is a financial wheeze which lets the company and its owners off too easily.
    The Economist, 19 Sep. 2019
  • The new performances up the intensity, which is only further heightened by the nasty rasp and sinister wheeze that age has visited upon Lunch’s voice.
    Peter Margasak, Chicago Reader, 13 July 2017
  • The legend made sense when Stripey emitted an uneven wheeze reminiscent of someone trying desperately to stop laughing long enough to catch her breath.
    Helen Sullivan, New York Times, 30 Oct. 2019
  • Upon announcement, Buddy’s milestone case appeared fairly open and shut, but the Mahoneys’ experience over the two and a half months between their dog’s first wheeze and his death was one of confusion and heartbreak.
    Natasha Daly, National Geographic, 29 July 2020
  • The answer is not, as is suggested now, including by some at National Review, ‘a return to congressional government.’ That is a fraud and merely the latest wheeze of the never-Trumpers.
    Conrad Black, National Review, 6 Sep. 2017
  • The snow leopards all began exhibiting minor respiratory symptoms, including a dry cough and wheeze, within the last two weeks.
    Ben Tobin, USA TODAY, 12 Dec. 2020
  • There are no heroes here, just Kidman fully immersing herself in a character for whom every action is an attack, for whom every word is a wheeze, and for whom every movement looks labored.
    Roxana Hadadi, Vulture, 25 Feb. 2021
  • While children with a lower respiratory infection like RSV tend to wheeze, such noises may only be apparent to medical providers.
    Byerin Prater, Fortune Well, 3 Mar. 2023
  • Team Johnson has since floated a number of wheezes to circumvent this, from requesting that a friendly EU member state vetoes the request, thereby guaranteeing a no-deal Brexit, or simply ignoring the instruction.
    Luke McGee, CNN, 14 Sep. 2019
  • There needs to be international cooperation to fight corporate wheezes.
    Washington Post, 30 Sep. 2019
  • Various wheezes have been proposed to get around this, including off-balance-sheet vehicles linked to public bodies like universities or housing associations that can tap markets without violating the debt brake.
    The Economist, 14 Nov. 2019
  • However, there were no significant associations between vaping nicotine and wheeze.
    Kristen Rogers, CNN, 24 Dec. 2020

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'wheeze.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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