The human salivary glands are in front of the ear, above the opening of your throat, and behind and a little under the jaw. They are the same places in cats, excepts cats have an extra one that is under and a little past the eye.
Humans have paired salivary glands.
Yes, the human body do have three salivary glands.
you have three pairs of salivary glands, six in total (on both sides).
mouth
The major salivary glands are located around the lower maxilla in both humans and fetal pigs. These are used to generate saliva.NEWThe major salivary glands are the parotid, submandibular, and sublingual glands. They secrete saliva into your mouth; the parotid through tubes that drain saliva, called salivary ducts, near your upper teeth, submandibular under your tongue, and the sublingual through many ducts in the floor of your mouth.
The two types of glands in a human body are ductless glands and duct glands. A few of the duct glands are tear ducts, sweat glands, and salivary glands.
There are 3 pairs of major salivary glands: - Parotid, the largest, is at the back of the jaw by the ear - Sublingual, under the tongue - Submandibular (also called submaxillary) in the lower jaw. There are also many minor salivary glands. These are tiny glands in the lips and in the linings of the mouth and throat. Salivary glands produce saliva which keeps the mouth moist and starts the digestion of food. It also protects against tooth decay.
yh but i need to know what it is in the body? i need pictuer will u be able to show me some plz
Human beings have lots of different types of glands, including sweat glands, salivary glands, thyroid glands, etc., and these have various different appearances although they are all inside the body and therefore are not very easily seen unless you are performing an autopsy.
Hyperosmolar means an abnormally increased amount of concentration of bodily fluids and this may be the case with the parotid salivary glands because of their function in lubricating the back of the mouth to assist with food transport to and through the esophagus, versus the front of the mouth, where saliva first comes into contact with the food to begin breaking it down and lubricating it. (Front of the mouth would be saliva from the Sublingual salivary glands and Submandibular salivary glands)
Salivary glands, stomach, exocrine pancreas, and small intestine.
The blood-sucking tsetse (SEET see) fly, when it feeds on an infected human or other mammal. The zooflagellate reproduces in the gut of the fly and then migrates to its salivary glands. When the fly bites the human, the zooflagellate is transferred to the human host.