Your fallopian tubes are lined with tiny hair-like structures called cilia which are constantly swaying back and forth to help guide the egg and push it along to the uterus :)
The uterine tube is lined with cilia. These small hair-like projections sweep the egg toward the uterus.
alveolus
The trachea.
cilia
The trachea is lined with ciliated columnar epithelium, which has hundreds of tiny hairs called cilia.
nasal passage
cilia
The trachea is lined with ciliated columnar epithelium, which has hundreds of tiny hairs called cilia.
Little hairs called cilia. Get on my level
to move material further down the tube. ie from the infundibulum to the ampulla
The inner walls of the lungs are covered with cilia, small microscopic hairs that are consistently moving in a wave-like flow upwards toward the throat and mouth.
The cilia beat in waves hundreds of times a second catching the egg at ovulation and moving it through the tube to the uterine cavity. The cilia move the egg along the length of the Fallopian tube.