Stomach
Well, the stomach! After all, the esophagus is in the digestive system. But, you may have confused the esophagus with the trachea, in the respiratory system. If that is true, then the answer is the bronchial tubes in the lungs. The respiratory system is rather interesting, though only to geeks like me. If you are a geek, then by all means research it! If you believe that you have enough projects going on, though, then save it for a boring day. Believe me, you should study it!
After the esophagus, the food is balled up into what is called a bolus and is dropped into the stomach to get digested. It then travels through the duodendum, the small intestine, and lastly the large intestine before getting excreted.
it proved it dose it like this esophagus stomach small than large intestine
Stomach is the next part in the digestive system. (Alimentary Canal)
What comes after the esophagus
Matrix algebra
small intestine
digestive
The digestive system includes the esophagus.
digestive system
The organ is the esophagus and the system is digestive.
The esophagus, large intestine, and rectum are in the digestive system.
for bringing food from the mouth to the stomach in the digestive system
The system of organs in an animal's body that processes food, including the mouth, esophagus, stomach, and intestines.
The digestive system includes the stomach. The stomach is a hollow, muscular organ that is capable of stretching. Food enters the stomach from the esophagus. The body system that the stomach belongs to is the digestive system.
From the esophagus to the anus, the digestive is basically a tube very similar to other tubular organs in the body. All such tubular organs are composed of several tissue layers arranged around a lumen. In a "generic" tubular organ, these layers are as follows (from the lumen to the ablumenal layer).
Gastro intestinal tract /systemThe digestive system.
The organs/structures of the digestive system are the Mouth, Esophagus, Stomach, Small Intestine, Pancreas, Liver, Gall Bladder, Large Intestine (or Colon), Rectum, and Anus.
The epiglottus is the digestive and respitory because it stop the food from entering the trechea or windpipe so the food goes the the esophagus.