It sounds like your cat is completely rejecting its food because it cannot digest or swallow it, either from eating too quickly or too much at a time, your cat has worms, or down to the food itself.
Many brands of food (particularly dry) are packed with corns and grains. This is cheap carbohydrate filler that the food manufacturers use as its a cheaper source of protein than meat is. Cats are strict carnivores, so can only get their nutrients from meat-based protein, not plant-based protein.
Sadly, it is all this carbohydrate filler might be the reason your cat is vomiting up undigested pieces immediately after eating. Cats cannot digest such a high level carbohydrate at all; the stomach usually ends up working far harder than it should just to try and break the kibble down (a cat's stomach has evolved to break down raw meat quickly - not to store grain). This doesn't help as many cats will just swallow pieces of kibble whole - they will often not crunch the food. The biscuits will often just sit in the stomach for long periods of time and often get converted into fat (this is one of the main causes of obesity) if the cat does manage to digest it.
It might be advisable to take him to the vets to make sure there is no underlying problem such as worms or other parasites, and to switch him to a grain-free food. There are many wet foods that are high in meat and grain free, but there are also some dry foods out there with no grain such as Orijen. Look at the Ingredients and stay away from labels such as "grain, corn, wheat gluten, grain/corn by product, by product meal" etc.
Penguins do not produce milk, as they are birds and do not lactate like mammals. They regurgitate partially digested food to feed their chicks.
The omasum in a cow acts as a filter, removing excess water and absorbing nutrients from the partially digested food before passing it on to the abomasum for further digestion.
Hamsters do not naturally use a litter box like cats. They typically designate a specific corner of their cage as a bathroom area, so you can place bedding or litter in that corner to make cleaning easier. Regularly clean this area to keep the cage environment clean and odor-free.
The pylorus in frogs functions as the muscular valve that regulates the passage of food from the stomach into the small intestine. It helps control the flow of partially digested food and stomach acid from the stomach to the intestines for further digestion and absorption.
Skin, bone, a little muscle, sinosial tissue...
what is chyme?
In the Stomach
A bolus
The stomach!
Regurgitation is a normal act for parrots. It is how they feed their young. Parrots will regurgitate their partially digested food for their chicks.
Peristalsis.
food
swallowed and partially digested
chyme
homosexualality
The adult birds regurgitate partially digested food for their young.
the food will digest in the small intestine by the stomsch and eshopagus