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Definitions

trachea

[trey-kee-uh, truh-kee-uh] / ˈtreɪ ki ə, trəˈki ə /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

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The trouble with this was that the abductor muscles are the ones that open the trachea, allowing airflow to the lungs.

From Slate Apr. 18, 2026

Chemotherapy and radiation left him with a tube in his trachea and difficulty breathing - something that was written into his final role, reprising his "Iceman" character in the 2022 Top Gun sequel.

From BBC Dec. 31, 2025

"You can protect the blood vessels in your neck. It also helps shield your trachea in front," he added.

From Barron's Nov. 8, 2025

It found evidence of “severe bilateral acute pulmonary edema” and “frothy pulmonary edema in trachea and mainstem bronchi.”

From Salon Jan. 21, 2025

He’d been given a front of his neck so a breathing tube could be inserted into his trachea, or windpipe.

From "Mountains Beyond Mountains" by Tracy Kidder and Michael French

Paolo Macchiarini, the surgeon famed and then disgraced for implanting artificial tracheae seeded with stem cells into patients, took the stand in his trial for assault in Solna, Sweden, last week.

From Science Magazine May 11, 2022

I started going to twee pet shops for cow tracheae, bull penises and limited-ingredient-grain-free-single-source kibble.

From Salon Nov. 10, 2018

Aquatic chelicerates utilize gill respiration, whereas terrestrial species use either tracheae or book lungs for gaseous exchange.

From Textbooks Apr. 25, 2013

Canine Health Foundation, as well as to their collaboration with the Orthopedic Foundation for Animals to measure the diameters of tracheae in bulldogs in order to combat bracycephalic airway syndrome.

From New York Times Nov. 23, 2011

Insects are generally killed, according to Dr. Nitschke, in about a quarter of an hour, owing to their tracheae being closed by the secretion.

From Insectivorous Plants by Darwin, Charles

Earlier studies from other research groups suggested that flu-related glycan receptors were present in the noses, tracheas, and lungs of cattle.

From Science Daily Jun. 23, 2026

His work using plastic tracheas with stem cells held out the prospect of patients no longer waiting for donors.

From BBC Jun. 17, 2022

We need our tracheas to stay open while we recline, lest we suffer apneas and struggle to breath during slumber.

From Salon Jun. 12, 2022

Other trachea replacement attempts include transplanting part of a donor’s frozen, preserved aorta, the body’s main artery, and fabricating tracheas from patients’ own chest muscles and rib cartilage.

From New York Times Apr. 6, 2021

He became famous by creating replacement tracheas, or windpipes, in the lab, initially from donor tracheas and later from plastic versions.

From Science Magazine Feb. 14, 2018




Vocabulary lists containing trachea


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