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Discover Ludwig"suffocate on" is a correct and usable phrase in written English
It is used to refer to the act of being unable to breathe properly due to some obstruction or obstruction of airflow. For example, "The child had to be rushed to the emergency room after she started to suffocate on a piece of food lodged in her throat."
Exact(12)
Without it, she would suffocate on her phlegm.
Children can suffocate on soft bedding, which may contribute to as many as 900 SIDS deaths a year.
Then we watched the news reports: "We don't know how to get our newborn home from the maternity ward; we fear the infant may suffocate on the way".
While the Mets were introducing a nice guy and asking for calm and faith, you could suffocate on the emptiness at their Shea Stadium news conference.
A man in the US has been charged with killing his stepfather by giving him what police call an "atomic wedgie", leading the alleged victim to suffocate on his own underwear.
Government policy health care policy would have him unproductive and suffocate on his own spit.
Similar(48)
"He was suffocating on his own face.
Hope is oxygen to someone who is suffocating on despair.
They claim he suffocated on his vomit in his cell.
Mr. Saylor suffocated on the floor, on his stomach, hands cuffed behind him.
One man in 2009 ostensibly suffocated on his quilt while sleeping.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com