No, a Capillary is a small blood vessel that delivers oxygen and other nutrients to cells.
Nutrients are absorbed by the blood vessel in the small intestines. Special cells in the small intestines are facilitate this movement.
They are a very small and narrow blood vessel. Smaller than an artery, they carry blood to the capillaries which carry blood to the cells of the body.
Capillary vessels.
Osmosis occurs in the small intestines which contain the villi. There are blood vessels connected to the villi so nutrients/glucose in the small intestines diffuses through the semi-permeable membrane of the cells in the blood vessel.
arteriole
blood cells are small and red
Red blood cells are too small to contain blood vessels. They are cells and they travel in blood vessels.
The smallest blood vessels in the body are capillaries, whose lumens can be as small as one blood cell thick in some areas.
in the intestines and in the liver, the latter being stored glucoses.
Usually by a needle. A small jab to a finger tip for a small sample, and a bigger to a blood vessel for a larger sample.
The blood vessel called the mesentery is usually rich in nutrients that is absorbed from the small intestines.