Whether itâs from allergies, dust, or a cold, sneezes are a universal experience. The way we express them, though, is very much dependent on the language we speak. âAchoo!â is the verbalization favored by those who speak English, while âAtchoum!â is typically used by French speakers. People whose first language is Japanese will exclaim âHakashun!ââand those are just a few examples.
Nobody plans the noise theyâre going to produce when a tickle hits those nasal membranes. Behind the scenes, however, your brain makes a split-second decision based on your cultural norms. We know this because deaf people donât say anything when they sneeze: According to [the BBC]( and partially deaf journalist [Charlie Swinbourne]( they just take âa heavy breath as the deep pre-sneeze breath is taken, then a sharper, faster sound of air being released.â
Regardless of what comes out of your mouth when you sneeze, just know that [40,000]( tiny droplets come with itâso please cover up ([with your elbow]( and then wash your hands.
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[Quartz Daily Obsession]
Sneezes
April 06, 2020
Express yourself
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Whether itâs from allergies, dust, or a cold, sneezes are a universal experience. The way we express them, though, is very much dependent on the language we speak. âAchoo!â is the verbalization favored by those who speak English, while âAtchoum!â is typically used by French speakers. People whose first language is Japanese will exclaim âHakashun!ââand those are just a few examples.
Nobody plans the noise theyâre going to produce when a tickle hits those nasal membranes. Behind the scenes, however, your brain makes a split-second decision based on your cultural norms. We know this because deaf people donât say anything when they sneeze: According to [the BBC]( and partially deaf journalist [Charlie Swinbourne]( they just take âa heavy breath as the deep pre-sneeze breath is taken, then a sharper, faster sound of air being released.â
Regardless of what comes out of your mouth when you sneeze, just know that [40,000]( tiny droplets come with itâso please cover up ([with your elbow]( and then wash your hands.
ð¦ [Tweet this!](
ð [View this email on the web](
AP Photo
By the digits
[10:]( Cars damaged when a California driver had a sneezing fit in 2012
[33%:]( Share of the population affected by photic sneeze reflex, also known as Autosomal Dominant Compelling Helio-Ophthalmic Outburst (ACHOO), the condition that causes sneezing due to sudden sunlight changes
[14:]( Inches above food that a âsneeze guardâ must be placed at a buffet, according to the National Sanitation Foundation International
[200 ft (61 m):]( Distance a sneeze can travel
[3,118,00+:]( Views of a video featuring a mama panda startled by her baby sneezing
Explain it like I'm 5!
Sneeze mechanics
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That sneeze? It might feel like a small explosion in your nasal cavity, but what it unleashes into the air has a name: a multiphase turbulent buoyant cloud. In 2014, researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology [published a paper]( (pdf) in the Journal of Fluid Mechanics that studied how small droplets of saliva and mucus disperse in the air after a sneeze. They found that rather than acting as discrete objects, the droplets were bound together in a gas cloud that could reach much further than previously believed. [It looks like this]( and âif you forget the fact that itâs a sneeze, itâs actually a pretty beautiful process,â researcher [Lydia Bourouiba]( told Science Friday.
âIf you ignored the presence of the gas cloud, your first guess would be that larger drops go farther than the smaller ones, and travel at most a couple of meters,â John Bush, one of the paperâs authors and a professor of applied mathematics at the school, [told MIT News.]( âBut by elucidating the dynamics of the gas cloud, we have shown that thereâs a circulation within the cloudâthe smaller drops can be swept around and resuspended by the eddies within a cloud, and so settle more slowly. Basically, small drops can be carried a great distance by this gas cloud while the larger drops fall out.â
Those smaller droplets spread far enough to get into ventilation systems and drift across the room. So even if youâre ensconced in a cubicle (or the spare bedroom), cover your mouth and nose when you sneeze, please.
[Read the Quartz Obsession on Navier-Stokes equations.](
AP Photo/Charles Dharapak
Brief history
[77 AD:]( In Natural History, Pliny wonders âWhy it is that we salute a person when he sneezes?â
[750:]( The origin of the phrase âGod bless youâ may have begun, according to some accounts, when Pope Gregory I believed that a sneeze heralded the onset of the bubonic plague.
[19th century:]( The German word gesundheit meaning âhealthâ gains traction in the US as a response to a sneeze; it falls out of favor in World War I.
[1945:]( Britainâs health ministry starts issuing a series of amusing films to educate people on the risk of spreading disease via sneezes.
[1949:]( The US Department of Agriculture recommends that cities plant male trees to prevent seeds from littering the streetâthus beginning a flood of allergy-aggravating pollinators.
[1981:]( The record for the longest sneezing episode is set by Donna Griffiths of Worcestershire, England, who sneezed once a minute for 976 days.
[2009:]( US health and human services secretary Kathleen Sebelius chides NBCâs Chuck Todd when he sneezes without covering his mouth at a press conference. Even the Sesame Street character â[Elmo knows how to sneeze]( she says.
Quotable
âAim low, off the windshield, because it can mess up your view and thereâs no way to clear it.â
â NASA astronaut David Wolf, [explaining]( how to sneeze in space
Giphy
Department of jargon
What do you say when someone sneezes?
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Bored of âbless you?â Here are some of the more interesting cultural responses to a sneeze from around the world:
Vietnam: [Com muá»i,]( ârice with saltâ (said to children)
Serbia: [Pis maco]( or âgo away, kittenâ (also said to children)
Turkish: Cok yaÅa, rahat yaÅa or â[live long and prosper]( (yes, really)
French: [Ã tes souhaits]( or âto your wishesâ
Iceland: There are different responses for consecutive sneezes, starting with [âGod help you,â]( followed by âstrengthen you,â then âand support.â
Latin America: There are consecutive responses in some areas here too, including [âsalud, dinero, amorâ]( (âhealth, money, loveâ).
The word âsneeze,â incidentally, [arises from a mistake](. It was originally âfnese,â and the similarity between the âfâ and the way a long âsâ were written in medieval manuscripts led to its evolution.
Person of Interest
Martin Luther King Jr.âs close call
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On Sept. 20, 1958, a 29-year-old Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was signing copies of his first book at a department store in Harlem. Posing as an admirer, Izola Ware Curry approached King and, after confirming his identity, plunged a 7-inch steel letter opener into his chest. Removing the weapon took doctors hours of intense surgery; the tip of the weapon had been so close to Kingâs aorta that a mere sneeze would have killed him instantly. After hearing of this horrifying detail, a young student [sent King a letter]( âIâm simply writing you to say that Iâm so happy that you didnât sneeze.â
In his âIâve Been to the Mountaintopâ speech on April 3, 1968, the day before he was assassinated, King responded to the decade-old letter:
âI, too, am happy that I didnât sneeze. Because if I had sneezed, I wouldnât have been around here in 1960, when students all over the South started sitting-in at lunch counters. If I had sneezed, I wouldnât have been around here in 1961, when we decided to take a ride for freedom and ended segregation in interstate travel. If I had sneezed, I wouldnât have been here in 1963, when the black people of Birmingham, Ala., aroused the conscience of this nation and brought into being the Civil Rights Bill. If I had sneezed, I wouldnât have had a chance later that year, in August, to try to tell America about a dream that I had had. Iâm so happy that I didnât sneeze.â
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Giphy
Pop quiz
Walt Disney considered more than 50 names for the Seven Dwarfs. Which of these wasnât on the list?
WeepyFuryBiggy-WiggySnoopy
Correct. Other possibilities included Scrappy, Hoppy, Gloomy, Silly, Gabby, Blabby, Flabby, Dizzy, and Awful.
Incorrect.
If your inbox doesnât support this quiz, find the solution at bottom of email.
Million-dollar question
Why donât we sneeze in our sleep?
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You may wake yourself up talking, snoring, moving, laughing, or even walkingâbut youâll probably never wake yourself up sneezing. According to [Popular Science]( interview with sleep researcher Steven Shea, director of the Oregon Institute of Occupational Health Sciences at Oregon Health and Science University, a sleep-sneeze is a scientific impossibility. Of the hundreds of people Shea has observed for sleep studies, âIâve never witnessed anyone sneezing,â he reports. âBut, Iâve never provoked them, either.â
Shea has multiple theories as to why shut-eye precludes us from sneezing, but perhaps the strongest is related to the stages of non-REM and REM sleep. During non-REM sleep, he says, minor stimuli doesnât get through to the brain. âThe thalamus and the cerebral cortex are in this dance where theyâre controlling each other, and itâs sort of blocking the sensory input.â However, strong stimuli could certainly wake up a heavy sleeper, who might then sneeze in response to the sleep-stopping stimuli.
REM sleep, Shea believes, prevents sneezes in a different way. Thatâs when we dream, so our brains induce partial paralysis to prevent us from acting out our dreams. (That partial paralysis doesnât always workâhence, sleepwalking.) This state probably includes paralysis of some of the muscles that induce sneezing.
Watch this!
Sneezing might not exactly be a big box-office draw these days, but in 1894, people were riveted. [According]( to the Library of Congress, this Edison Kinetoscopic Record is the earliest surviving copyrighted motion picture and features Fred Ott, an Edison employee known for his silly sneezes.
Fun fact!
African wild dog packs [vote by sneezing](.
This one weird trick!
What happens if you sneeze with your eyes open?
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Contrary to popular belief, your eyeballs wonât pop out of their sockets. Weâre sure this isnât one you want to test at home yourself, so luckily, the MythBusters tested it for us. Itâs doubtful that they were too concerned about actually losing any peepers: Your eye sockets and nose arenât connected, and thereâs no way for the pressure from a sneeze to move behind your eyeball.
And, as Discovery [points out]( if we were relying on nothing but the thin skin of our weak eyelids to keep the power of a sneeze from combusting out of our eyes at high speed, weâd all be in trouble. The reason our eyes shut when we sneeze is a little less terrifyingâitâs simply a reflex.
So go ahead and try to sneeze with your eyes openâbut whatever you do, donât try to suppress a sneeze like this [34-year-old Brit](. After preventing a sneeze from exiting his nose or mouth, the man experienced a painful popping sensation in his throat and got himself to the ER, posthaste. Doctors discovered that the force of the sneeze had punctured the manâs pharynx, which allowed air bubbles into his neck and the space between his lungs. After seven days in the hospital and an unpleasant experience with a feeding tube, heâd learned a hard lesson about sneeze suppression.
take me down this ð° hole!
Pollen and dust arenât the only culprits behind sneezing attacks. Our bodies sometimes interpret harmless stimuli for threatening irritants that need to be removed from our bodies, triggering sneezes for [seemingly silly reasons]( from sunshine to sex.
Giphy
Poll
Elbow sneezer or hand sneezer?
[Click here to vote](
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Todayâs email was an updated version of one that originally ran on June 18, 2018. It was written by [Stacy Conradt]( re-edited by [Annaliese Griffin]( and produced by [Luiz Romero]( and [Tori Smith](.
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