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Gills are an organ that fish have, that enables them to obtain oxygen from the water that they are in; it is what fish use instead of lungs.
There is no such term as "green CPR".
The term feild means a green green place that is cool :) and has green stuff all arround it
The term going green means.... doing good deeds for the earth and doing things that dont hurt the earth..
When someone has eaten a lot and are very full.Over-eaten; too full after a meal"Stuffed to the gills" means that a person is very full, or satiated, from eating too much, because stuffed refers to being full of food or other things, while "to the gills" refers to a whole fish with stuffing in the body cavity up to behind the head where the gills are located.The term is "stuffed to the gills" and is when someone ate too much and is overfull.It is referring to a part of the fish, that is just under the head. A human equivalent would be the lower cheeks next to, and the upper throat under the mouth.It is also used in the expression, he lookeda little green around thegills.Stuffed up to the Gills means you have filled up your stomach and even your esophagus, and can't eat any more without looking a little green around the gills and maybe throwing up.
The plural "gills" is the collective term for the breathing tissues of fish, amphibians, and some crustaceans. These animals use their gills to extract oxygen from water.
Breathing is breathing is breathing whatever you use to do it with. There is no special term or word to my knowledge that specifically means "Breathing with gills".
Around the edges.
The term aqua is Italian for water, agua is the spanish term for water, and Verde means green in spanish, so I surmise that it means green water
A "Green Card" is the old term of a US Permanent Resident Visa. However, the Permanent Resident Visa is now no longer printed on green paper, nor is it credit-card sized. It's a historical term for the visa.
The phrase "filled to the gills" originates from the fish anatomy term "gills," which are the breathing organs for many aquatic animals. When a fish is "filled to the gills," it means it is completely full or packed to capacity, like a fish that has eaten so much that its gills are bulging.
'Bypass' means to go around an obstruction.