It's rugae defined as large, longitudinal folds
Generally no - hunger is a drive that the brain focuses on to the exclusion of other non-survival thought processes.
Ruminants have a compartmentalised stomach. There are 4 compartments, the rumen, reticulum, omasum and abomasum. A non ruminant does not have a compartmentalised stomach, the non ruminants stomach has similar fucntions to that of the abomasum in the ruminants
The stomach
The stomach of the Hippo has three chambers, but is non-ruminating.
Yes - the condition is known as non-productive emesis or dry heaves. The stomach diaphragm and esophagus spasm just like they do when the stomach is full, but nothing comes up.
The role of non-striated muscles in the stomach is to churn foods for digestion. Non-striated muscles are smooth and have involuntary movement.
The similarities of a ruminant and a non-ruminant digestive system is that they all have only one stomach, and the same organs that make up the whole digestive system complex. The difference between a ruminant and a non-ruminant is that a ruminant has four chambers in that stomach and a non-ruminant has a simple stomach (one stomach comprising of one chamber).
yes, technically.
No
No. Neither contain appetite suppressants and in fact, taking both or either on an empty stomach will cause nausea, sometimes sever nausea depending on how empty the stomach is and the individual. Continuing to regularly take acetaminophen (aspirin) without food can cause stomach ulcers and damage the lining of the stomach. It just doesn't work. Added: Just wanted to make a quick, but important note: acetaminophen is NOT the same as aspirin, as it might be concluded from the answer above. In fact, acetaminophen (Tylenol) is a NON-ASPIRIN pain reliever that may be taken by people who cannot/should not take blood-thinning substances, such as aspirin.
Inanis intus non sum.
You cannot find an empty set in U because U is defined as a non-empty set.