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whooping cough
[hoo-ping, hoop-ing]
noun
an infectious disease of the respiratory mucous membrane, caused by Bordetella pertussis, characterized by a series of short, convulsive coughs followed by a deep inspiration accompanied by a whooping sound.
whooping cough
/ ˈhuːpɪŋ /
noun
Technical name: pertussis. an acute infectious disease characterized by coughing spasms that end with a shrill crowing sound on inspiration: caused by infection with the bacillus Bordetella pertussis
whooping cough
An infectious disease caused by the bacterium Bordatella pertussis, seen most commonly in children and characterized by coughing spasms often ending in loud gasps. Vaccinations usually given during infancy confer immunity to the disease.
Also called pertussis
whooping cough
An acute and infectious disease occurring mainly in children and characterized by violent coughing. Caused by a kind of bacteria, whooping cough has largely been eradicated in the United States through a program of vaccination, which is begun when infants are just three months old.
Word History and Origins
Origin of whooping cough1
Example Sentences
The death, which occurred between January and June 2025, is the first fatal case of whooping cough in the UK this year.
Back then, pharmaceutical companies faced hundreds of lawsuits alleging that the vaccine protecting kids from whooping cough, diphtheria and tetanus caused unrelenting seizures that led to severe disabilities.
Among the recorded causes of death were measles, whooping cough, influenza, tuberculosis and bronchitis.
“Child mortality under age 5 has declined by 86 percent, and there is no way you can explain it by controlling measles and whooping cough and tuberculosis,” Aaby emphasized to Salon.
Vaccine uptake in the UK has fallen over the last decade, leading to outbreaks of measles and whooping cough.
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