For the first part of question personally as doctor i do not see any reason why to have doubts on their words. To be 100% secure there is an endoscopic procedure that controls mm per mm the mucosa of your throat (eye controlled) a tube with a light bulb that enters your throat and the doctor checks at the monitor the mucosa if there is something it can be removed immediately with this equipment. It is true that our body does not break down the bones. In my opinion better undergo the "Pharyngeal Endoscopy" procedure is more reliable. It is "Eye Controlled" procedure. With such procedure the doctor can check even esophageus or stomach. If the bone has passed down it surely it has damaged the mucosa along its way and you will be informed about that. (your doctor can see it in the monitor).
the ascending colon makes up he first part of the large intestine along with the cecum.Cec/o
Cleverly is an adverb.
No, it is not a long O (oh) sound. It has the OU or OW sound, and rhymes with brown, clown, and noun.There is no corresponding long O word, but it would sound like the first part of don't.
That part there ------> O
If you mean the breed of horse, it is pronounced: han-o-vare-ee-en Han: like in hand O: a long "O" Vare: like the first part of very or vary Ee: like in bee En: like in open
It was published in the book "The Trimmed Lamp and Other Stories of the Four Million" in 1919.
:O)
First part (O is white, X is black): OXO XOX OXO Second part: OOO OXO OOO See related link for screenshots.
C4H8[-CH2--O--C(=O)(-C{CH3}{CH}]2 in which the bolded part of this ester formula is 'hexane di-O-l' and the ithalicked part is twiced 'methacrylate'
The first Wham-O Frisbee was first made in 1948.
All the verbs that end in -o in the first principal part and -ere in the second principal part. Note: some people count verbs that end in -io in the first principal part and -ere in the second principal part as third conjugation. However, others place it in a different conjugation called 'third -io conjugation.'
O yeah part of plenty ;)