your lungs silly through your mouth and nose. unless you are talking about gas and that is a chemical reaction inside your body and that's a different kind of air. or an accidental needle air bubble can be put in the vien but that kills you
When we inhale, the diaphragm increases the volume of space in the chest, and this leaves the air pressure in the lungs lower than that of the atmosphere. As the atmospheric pressure is then greater than the pressure of air in the lungs, the pressure of the atmosphere (or atmospheric pressure) will force air into the lungs.
a perfect Mix of oxygen and Carbon dioxide enter your body through your mouth and go through your breathing pipe to your lungs it then it goes past a paperthin skin which unoxigenated Blood goes past and then your blood is oxigenated!.
Ima Tell You What My Dad Told Me Go Ask Your Motha
Air is taken into the lungs through the respiratory system. When air is breathed in the body receives oxygen and when air is exhaled carbon dioxide is released.
The lungs take air into the body. First the air moves through the mouth and nose to the pharynx, then larynx, then trachea.
Throat and the Lungs
The respiratory system.
the tube
When your lungs move to bring in air and remove gases you are breathing.
Diaphragm, the spelling of that was kind of a guess, but you get what I mean. :)
Breathing or Respiration
It is called breathing. Breathing is the movement of the chest that brings air into the lungs and removes waste gases. The air entering the lungs contain oxygen. It passes from the lungs into the circulatory system because there is less oxygen in blood when it enters the lungs than in the cells of the lungs. Resource: McGraw-Hill Online Textbook Grade 7 p. 458.
The trachea is the big straight tube that brings air to the lungs. The trachea then divides into main stem bronchi, lobar bronchi, segmental bronchi, bronchioles, etc.
The trachea located in throat is the first tube that brings oxygen into the body. The bronchial tubes actually bring air into the lungs for oxygenation.
The diapragm is most important to the respiratory process. Your diaphragm pulls down when you inhale, opening your lungs up and letting air in. Your trachea is what brings athe air from your nose to your lungs. Nose, pharynx, larynx, trachea, bronchi, lungs, and diapragm are all involved.
Inspiration brings air into the lungs. Expiration expels air from the lungs. In most lung diseases, the air breathed in is not completely or easily exhaled.
The Lungs
the lungs bring it in from the air to the body but the circulatory system takes it around the body