Examples of using Have inhaled in English and their translations into Swedish
{-}
-
Colloquial
-
Official
-
Medicine
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Official/political
-
Computer
-
Programming
-
Political
Who have inhaled what?
The victim must have inhaled it.
Must have inhaled a fair amount of lye.
And yes, I have inhaled.
He must have inhaled the bullet when he was struggling to breathe.
Victim must have inhaled it.
I have thought about that moment more times than I have inhaled.
They must have inhaled a drug.
Fluid in the lungs is a symptom often found in patients with heart disease or in patients who have inhaled strong, lung-damaging toxins.
After you have inhaled the medicine.
8 and 9 until you have inhaled all of the contents.
He may have inhaled the spores.
Make sure you have inhaled correctly.
She must have inhaled it when she slept.
Make sure you have inhaled correctly.
The soldiers have inhaled the fumes, which arose in the course of the exercise.
The victim must have inhaled it.
Come on I have inhaled so much bleach,
may not have inhaled correctly.
Dr. Hodgins may have inhaled the spores.
If you have inhaled too much Oslif Breezhaler
But obviously, you have inhaled too much patchouli.
If you have inhaled too much of this medicine
This confirms that you have inhaled your full dose correctly.
Intone the anthems of grandeur, for We have inhaled the fragrance of reunion at the approach of that Day whereon the kingdom of names was adorned with the ornament of Our Name, the Exalted, the Most High.
A full 30 000 are in use- people have inhaled millions of times, with excellent results.
And then, yesterday, the culprit put the poison in the cooling fan so Jacob would have inhaled it when he turned on his machine,
Persons, that had inhaled smoke were transferred to a hospital by helicopters.
Police were informed that the man had inhaled the drugs through his nasal passages.
On March 10, 2004, a biologist discovered 5 dead bison which apparently had inhaled toxic geothermal gases trapped in the Norris Geyser Basin by a seasonal atmospheric inversion.