Yes. Think about the size of a babies lungs, and then imagine them inside your chest. It doesn't seem right. Obviously our lungs grow with our bodies.
The lungs (even one lung) are much bigger than the heart.
No, it is not possible for a tree to grow in your lungs.
Not really stronger, but males have bigger chests proportionally, which can hold bigger lungs.
The lungs are bigger than the diaphragm. The diaphragm is a dome-shaped muscle located beneath the lungs. When it contracts, it flattens out, creating more space in the chest cavity for the lungs to expand.
No. Spleen nodules cannot grow in human or any other lungs. Spleen nodules grow on the spleen. There are nodules that do grow in the lungs, however.
When you inhale, you breath in oxygen and your lungs get bigger.
You can't make your breasts grow bigger and faster. Your breasts grow as they are meant to and there is nothing you can do to speed-up that process or make them grow bigger.
No, fir trees cannot grow in human lungs. Lungs are not a suitable environment for the growth of trees.
Bigger lungs, more air.
Some spiders, bigger ones such as tarantulas, do have book lungs.
spotted salamanders grow lungs when they become a juvenile and a adult living on land
snakes and frogs need lungs to help them breath becuse when they grow they don't grow with gills they grom with lungs instead.