The respiratory system is very interesting, usually showing the Pharynx, then the epiglottis, the trachea and the two Bronchi (left and right) than the lung.
Yes, the gallbladder is located in the upper right side of the abdomen, beneath the liver. It is typically shown in anatomical diagrams along with other organs of the digestive system.
The nitrogen bases in DNA are represented by the horizontal lines in the diagram, labeled as adenine (A), thymine (T), cytosine (C), and guanine (G). These nitrogen bases pair up to form the "rungs" of the DNA ladder structure through complementary base pairing (A-T and C-G).
To understand the carbon cycle diagram easily, focus on the key processes like photosynthesis, respiration, decomposition, and combustion. Pay attention to how carbon moves between the atmosphere, plants, animals, soil, and oceans. Look for arrows showing the flow of carbon and how it is stored in different forms. Practice identifying the main components and their interactions to grasp the overall concept of the carbon cycle.
Chromosomes that look like X's are called "homologous chromosomes."
The air first enters into the nasal cavity (or mouth) then to the pharynx. Air is warmed by the nasal passages. From there, it passes through the trachea, then to the main bronchi (2, plural is bronchi; 1 is bronchus), and begins its descent into numerous bronchioles in the lungs. Within the lungs, the structures look like an upside down tree, wider at the top (the bronchi, which is like a split trunk of a tree), and getting increasingly narrower in the bronchioles (similar to branches on a tree being wider then getting narrower as the branches reach upward on a tree). At the ends of each bronchiole, there are clumps of aveoli which look like a clump of grapes. The aveloi round balls (just one is an aveolus) have a thin membrane which has many small blood vessels over and around each one. Here, the air we breathe passes into the bloodstream as oxygen. At the same time, carbon dioxide is released from the bloodstream to the aveloi, which expel it into the bronchioles, up though the lungs to the main bronchi, up the trachea, and back up to and out either the nose or the mouth.
lungs
this is the plant leaf diagram.
I believe you want to ask "what does a diagram of the nervous system look like?" But to answer both your literal question and what I think you are trying to ask. A diagram of the nervous system is basically a picture that shows and names different parts of the nervous system which is what sends and receives messages for the brain to compute. And here's an actual diagram of the nervous system. http://www.demosschiropractic.com/illusautonomic-nervous-system.gif
look like an octopus look like an octopus
No labels, but this link has a diagram. http://www.cnsweb.org/digestvertebrates/WWWEdStevensMammalGuineaPig.html
Cigarettes contain many harmful ingredients like Tar, Arsenic (which is a poison), Nicotine (this is what makes you addicted to the cigarette) etc. The effect to the respiratory system varies from how much and the period of time you have been smoking. The damage to the respiratory system is the Alvoli in your lungs (Look like little sacs in your lungs) die and your lungs go black from the tar in the cigarette.
a tree diagram is when you make a tree and your leaves have words on it
The diagram is available on different sites on internet. To look for the desired result, type "Circuit diagram of interactive voice response system" in the search engine, and you will get the image.
Here you go!
one dimensional
dog
Look at the wiring diagram for each.