the trachea
nasal cavity
When you inhale, your lungs expand and the volume in the thoracic cavity increases, creating more space for air to enter. This increase in space allows for more air to be taken in with each breath.
When you inhale, you breathe in air, allowing oxygen to enter your lungs. When you exhale, you breathe out air, releasing carbon dioxide from your lungs. This process is essential for the exchange of gases in your body.
i can inhale air
Much like as in a concertina or a piano accordian. Body muscles increase the volume of the chest, and air rushes in to occupy the extra space. Then the body muscles reduce the volume and to avoid being pressurised the air is pushed out.
Air can enter your body through the nose and mouth when you inhale. It can also enter through the trachea, also known as the windpipe, which connects the nose and mouth to the lungs.
They inhale air. What they extract from the air is oxygen.
Actually the ribs are moving outward and expanding as the lungs fill with air. The expansion of the ribs makes room for more air to enter the lungs.
To inhale, you breathe in by expanding your diaphragm and chest, allowing air to enter your lungs. To exhale, you release the air by contracting your diaphragm and chest, pushing the air out of your lungs. Practice deep breathing to improve your lung capacity and overall respiratory function.
when you inhale and exhale the air get into the stomach
Alligators are air breathers. They inhale and exhale through their nostrils. Their lungs absorb oxygen from the air that they inhale.
Yes, we breathe in a mixture of gases that includes nitrogen, which makes up about 78 of the air we inhale.