Food moves into the large intestine after it has been digested by the small intestine.
your large intestine and small intestine
From the stomach, the food moves into the small intestines. After the small intestines the food moves into the large intestines.
Yes, It does. When the food reaches the point that it is in the bloodstream, It goes through the large intestine.
Food moves from the large intestine to the small intestine. Food waste is then stored in the rectum until expelled through the anus.
After passing through the small intestine, digested food moves into the large intestine (also known as the colon). In the large intestine, water is absorbed and the remaining waste material is formed into feces before being expelled from the body through the rectum and anus during a bowel movement.
large intestine (colon)
Maybe I misunderstand your question, but... ... as the small and large intestine are joined to each other (exit small intestine and enter the large intestine), the food moves between the two almost instantaneously.
After the mouth, food travels down the esophagus to the stomach. From there, it moves to the small intestine where nutrients are absorbed, and then to the large intestine where water is absorbed before waste is excreted.
It goes through the pharynx (throat), esophagus, stomach, small intestine and large intestine.After food passes through the throat, it moves into the esophagus. The esophagus is a muscular tube that brings food to the stomach.
The small intestine is where food spends the most time during the digestive process. This is where nutrients from food are absorbed into the bloodstream before the remaining waste moves to the large intestine.
Food can stay in the large intestine for up to 3 days.
The order is as follows: Stomach, small intestine, large intestine.