No. Not directly. It would have to enter the mouth cavity and then enter the tube going to opposite ear.
The body of water that allows people to pass through from one side of the Americas to the other is an enclave.
If the normal methods don't work for getting water out of your ear, try to create a vacuum with your hand. Place your palm over your ear and pump in and out. Make sure your ear is facing downwards to allow gravity to drip it out.
Almost all bodies of water allow people to pass through from one side to the other. You can cross a river, sea, or canal via boat.
To hear and listen, not "go in one ear, come out the other ear".
If that is its direction of flight, yes.
Yes, she has 12 piercings in total. 4 on her right ear and 8 on her left ear.
Not sure which one, but the difference between an Asian elephant and an Indian elephant is the ear. One has a smaller ear and the other has a much larger ear.
When one can pass through the filter and the other cannot e.g. sand and water, flour and water.
When one can pass through the filter and the other cannot e.g. sand and water, flour and water.
It sounds like you might not have a problem with that ear, but rather the other one. It could be that the ear without wax hears normally, while the other side may be muffled from compacted ear wax. If you have not had a professional look in your ears with an otoscope, you probably should.
it could be exema or an allergic reaction
The auditory tube (aka Eustachian tube) opens at one end in the middle ear and the other end in the pharynx (throat). It is important in maintaining the correct air pressure in the middle ear, but it is also the means of bacteria getting up into the middle ear and causing earaches or otitis media.