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aspiration
(redirected from breathing in)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.25 sec.

aspiration

Withdrawal of fluid from the body using a suction instrument.

aspiration

In phonetics, an escape of unvoiced breath following the release of a plosive consonant, as in English ‘pin’, ‘tin’, ‘kin’, in which the aspirated initial /p/, /t/, /k/ differs from the unaspirated sounds used after /s/, as in ‘spin’, ‘stiff’, ‘skin’.

In French and many other languages, plosives are usually not aspirated. In Hindi, aspirated and unaspirated plosives are phonemically contrastive, as with /ph/ and /p/ (see phoneme); there are also voiced aspirated plosives contrasted with voiced unaspirated ones, as with /bh/ and /b/.

The noun ‘aspirate’ refers also to the sound of English /h/, an unvoiced glottal fricative. The term ‘aspiration’ is also applied by extension to certain cases where a historically pronounced /h/ is now silent, as in French; and even to consonants that are merely spelt with an h, as Welsh ph (/f/), th, ch. In classical Greek aspiration is indicated by a rough breathing (a mark placed above an initial vowel letter or r).



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1) Specifically, I presented the results of experiments performed to objectify and quantify changes observed with Limbic Breathing in the blood levels of oxygen and carbon dioxide; blood pH; blood lactic acid; white blood counts; and electrophysiological parameters, such as electromyopotentials, electrodermal conductance, pulse pressure, and others.
Here is the very good way to work on your abdominal breathing in the comfort of your own home:
But, using a Pink City lung - a device that imposes slow breathing on the user and can mimic pranayama breathing exercises - it was possible to measure the effects of controlled breathing in a hospital trial.
 
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