teeth tongue saliva (enzymes)
Mechanical digestion is the act of chewing and using your tongue to mix the food with saliva.
Upon your tongue's contact with the ice pop, the saliva on your tongue freezes, thus giving the effect that your tongue sticks to the ice pop. The same effect can be achieved by dipping your finger in water, then touching it to the ice pop.
The tongue does not sweat. However, you can salivate, which makes the mouth moist to wet. Without saliva, you can have dental cavities, gum disease, and very bad breath.
Saliva - produced by the salivary glands keeps the tongue (and the whole mouth) moist. It helps our taste-buds function properly, and aids the voice in producing sounds.
tongue
saliva..
there are glands under the tongue that leak sort of say. when the tongue moves the saliva is spread aroung.
It is cold enough to freeze your saliva on your tongue.
Saliva sinks down, when you swallow. But Saliva kills germs on your tongue.
Because the saliva on the tongue is very sticky.
Due to the saliva and temperature which is radiating from the tongue.
Saliva comes from three separate glands. They wet the food to make it easier to taste, chew, and swallow. One of the glands is under the tongue.
It is because under your tongue there are salivary glands that "shoot" out saliva
Teeth, jaws, tongue, saliva.
Saliva ,helps digest food
saliva.