Meaning of rhonchus in English
Pronunciation
/ˈrɒŋkəs/US accent
UK accent
Noun
rhonchusEtymology
early 19th century; earliest use found in John Forbes (1787–1861), physician and medical journalist. From French rhonchus from classical Latin rhonchus (also ronchus (2nd cent. a.d.)) from Byzantine Greek ῥόγχος (apparently only recorded as a Greek word in the Latin medical writer Caelius Aurelianus; compare Hellenistic Greek ῥογχασμός (Galen)), variant of ancient Greek ῥέγχος (also ῥέκχος) snoring from the same base as ῥέγχειν (also ῥέκχειν) to snore, probably from the same Indo-European base as Early Irish sreinnid snoresDefinitions
1. a sound like whistling or snoring that is heard with a stethoscope during expiration as air passes through obstructed channels