Yes, you do lose water when you breathe. This process is known as insensible water loss, where moisture is expelled from your lungs with each exhalation. The amount of water lost can vary depending on factors like temperature and humidity, but it contributes to overall fluid loss in the body. Staying hydrated is important to compensate for this loss, especially in dry environments or during physical activity.
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Animals lose water when they breathe, urinate, defecate, and sweat. This water loss must be replenished through drinking water and eating moist foods to maintain proper hydration and normal physiological functions.
We lose water when we sweat, pee, and breathe, our bodies are so darn good at triggering thirst and cueing urination that it's only when we're losing more water than we can replace.
yes
You breathe out more water vapour then when you breathe in
We do not breathe in the water as we can't breathe dissolved oxygen.Dissolved oxygen are oxygen that are dissolved into the water.
Yes, octopuses can breathe out of water. They have gills that extract oxygen from the air, allowing them to breathe when they are not in the water.
They use their gills to breathe under water.
The video is Lose My Breathe
u lose ur teeth
no, they just hold their breathe.
They use a blow hole to breathe in/out air when the surface the water.