snore

(redirected from snored)
Also found in: Dictionary, Medical.
Graphic Thesaurus  🔍
Display ON
Animation ON
Legend
Synonym
Antonym
Related
  • all
  • noun
  • verb

Synonyms for snore

the rattling noise produced when snoring

Related Words

the act of snoring or producing a snoring sound

breathe noisily during one's sleep

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
The study also found that women snored as loudly as men, with a snoring intensity of 50 decibels and 51.7 decibels among men.
Using multivariate analysis, the NHANES study with 5685 individuals aged ≥20 years old concluded that participants with occasional and frequent snoring had higher odds of prediabetes ( OR = 1.24, 95% CI : 1.04–1.47; and OR = 1.21, 96% CI : 1.02–1.43, respectively) than those who never snored.[sup][18] Compared to this study, we found slightly higher odds ( OR = 1.3, 95% CI : 1.1–1.4) of habitual snoring with prediabetes and disappearance of the association between occasional snoring, which may be explained by the racial differences between American and Chinese populations, and higher number of participants ( n = 13,592) who were older (≥40 years) in our study.
I have been using my Snore Solution now for over a year - and in that time I have NEVER SNORED - NOT ONCE.
Scientists found that women who snored in their sleep three or more nights per week had a higher risk of poor delivery outcomes, including smaller babies and Caesarean births.
According to the study, conducted in the University of Michigan Health System, chronic snorers or moms who snored before and during pregnancy are two thirds more likely to have a baby that's born below the tenth percentile for babies of the same gestational age compared to non-snorers.
"We recently found that children who snored loudly at both ages two and three years had more symptoms of hyperactivity, inattention, aggression, and even depression at age three than those who snored at only one age (but not both) and those who rarely snored.
For as long as Jackie Ryan can remember, she has snored and, at times, even wakes herself up by her loud breathing.
Those bed-sharing patients surveyed reported that 21 percent of their dogs and seven percent of their cats snored. About 53 percent of them considered their sleep to be disturbed by their pet's snoring.
I then gave him an ultimatum: If this didn't stop, he had to risk being target practice for my kick-boxing moves the next time he snored, or would have to move into the spare bedroom.
However, most of them did have times during the night when they snored. Some of the infants had snoring that caused arousals and some did not.
David Gozal of the University of Louisville (Ky.) and his colleagues compared the frequency of recurrent otitis media (ROM) and the need for tympanostomy tube placement in school-aged children who snored versus those who did not snore.
A third of couples admitted they hardly ever had sex because one or other of them snored.
Children who always snored were roughly four times as likely to perform poorly at math, science, and spelling as were children who never snored.
Researchers found that two- and three-year-olds who snored loudly at least a couple of times per week tended to have more problems with inattention and hyperactivity, Health news reported.