Not based on real research but only logic and reason it is unlikely that cousins would have identical saliva. They may be similar, but they do have different DNA and different genetics. Each person is unique. It would be as if you said that they are the exact same person.
No, siblings do not have the "same" saliva content for DNA. The DNA will be similar, but not exactly the same. Parents in two families tested their triplets and quadruplets using Ancestry's DNA service:
insideedition.com/investigative/21784-how-reliable-are-home-dna-ancestry-tests-investigation-uses-triplets-to-find-out The results showed similar ancestry, but with some variations.
Saliva contains the enzyme amylase which breaks down the starch (amylose) into maltose.
Saliva is swallowed, and therefore goes into the gastrointestinal tract.
no. there is no urine in our salva because saliva is made up of different cells that are juice like structures and saliva is found in the mouth but urine is urinated from urianry system. no there is no urine in the saliva anjil adhikari
Saliva is secreted from three different salivary glands. Saliva is mostly water with minute quantities of enzymes and ions. Saliva is very important to make ingested food easy to swallow.
Saliva isn't alive.
Guinea Pigs don't have the same saliva as dogs.
It's not saliva comes from your mouth
No.
Yes
dogs cannot spit becasue they do not have the same saliva glands that we have they have ones called saliva utocus which make green saliva if the dog is ill
All the Cimorelli sisters have the same mom.
The answer to your question is that sisters, sisters and sisters are all the same word and it is a silly question.
Yes, Merriam Webster defines it as to have a flow of saliva especially in excess.
No, they're not. (They're not even from the same country or of the same race.)
There aren't "sisters." They are exactly the same thing.
no
Either saliva or phlegm. Yum!