dyspnea

noun
/dɪspˈniː.ə/UK/ˈdɪsp.ni.ə/US

Etymology

Variant spelling of dyspnoea, a learned borrowing from Latin dyspnoea (“difficulty breathing”), from Ancient Greek δῠ́σπνοιᾰ (dŭ́spnoiă, “difficulty breathing, shortness of breath”), from δῠ́σπνοος (dŭ́spnoos, “short of breath, breathing with difficulty”, adjective) (also δῠ́σπνους (dŭ́spnous) by contraction) + -ῐᾰ (-ĭă, suffix forming abstract nouns). Δῠ́σπνοος (Dŭ́spnoos) is derived from δῠσ- (dŭs-, prefix meaning ‘bad; difficult, hard; unfortunate’) + πνέω (pnéō, “to blow; to breathe”) (from Proto-Indo-European *pnew- (“to breathe; to pant”)) + -ος (-os, suffix forming adjectives). The English word is analysable as dys- (prefix meaning ‘abnormal; difficult; disease’) + -pnea (suffix meaning ‘breathing, respiration’).

  1. derived from *pnew- — “to breathe; to pant
  2. derived from δῠ́σπνοιᾰ — “difficulty breathing, shortness of breath
  3. learned borrowing from dyspnoea — “difficulty breathing

Definitions

  1. Difficult or laboured breathing.

    • In a Diſpnœa, the breath is thick, vvithout noiſe or anhelation, and vvith leſs trouble.
    • During August the tumor again grew rapidly, causing dyspnœa, constipation and general malaise.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for dyspnea. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA