aphagia
inability to swallow
Glossopharyngeal
"Devour", from the Latin word vorare, "to swallow whole; to eat greedily".
No, dummy you have eat them. as in swallow...
Not necessarily. Both the inability to swallow and difficulty swallowing are called dysphagia in medical terminology. dys- means difficult, bad, abnormal, painful. -phagia refers to eating or swallowing. Sometimes the dysphagia, or difficulty swallowing can be bad enough to prevent someone from swallowing without aspirating(choking). That would appropriately be called dysphagia even though this makes for a virtual inability to swallow, but that is due to danger of choking, not due to actual emotional or physical inability to do the act of swallowing. But there can be situations with a total actual inability to swallow due to obstruction, emotional block, injury, congenital deformity, or surgical procedures that prevent swallowing such as radical surgery for cancer. These may be referred to as either dysphagia, or more correctly, as aphagia. a- means absent, without, not, away In this example, difficulty swallowing would not be called aphagia. But the inability to swallow might appropriately be called dysphagia.
-uncontrollable laughing -inability to swallow -coordination problems -speech problems
This is a inability person.
On Howrse the answer is : All of these (fever, inability to swallow and paralysis of hind legs).
Swallows are great fliers and catch and eat flying insects.
"Tragalo" can be translated to "swallow it" or "eat it" in English.
The medical word "phagia" is a suffix. It is derived from the Greek word "phagein," which means "to eat." In medical terminology, words ending in "-phagia" generally refer to eating or swallowing.