esophogus down to the large intestine in than through the small intestine than to the rectum and finally out.
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The distance that food travels in your digestive tract is about 10 meters.
The food gets chewed up in the mouth, and travels through the esophagus into the stomach. Then food absorbs all the nutrients, and breaks it up into waste. The waste travels through the small intestine, through the large intestine and out the rectum.
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.
Once you enter food through your mouth, it travels down the esophagus into the stomach. In the stomach, the food is mixed with digestive acids and enzymes to break it down. From the stomach, the partially digested food moves into the small intestine where nutrients are absorbed into the bloodstream. The remaining waste then travels to the large intestine and is eventually passed out of the body as stool.
The food starts in the mouth, travels down the esophagus to the stomach, travels from the stomach to the small intestine, travels then to to large intestine, and exits the body through the rectum then the anus.
When food travels from the stomach back to the mouth, it is called regurgitation.In some animals, this is normally emesis, or vomiting. In ruminants such as cows, it is called chewing the cud. Birds normally regurgitate swallowed food to feed their young.
After food leaves your mouth, it travels down the esophagus, a muscular tube that connects the throat to the stomach. It is propelled by rhythmic contractions called peristalsis. Once it reaches the stomach, the food is mixed with gastric juices for further digestion.
That would be the alimentary canal. Food enters the mouth, then travels down the esophagus to the stomach. From there it enters the intestines and exits through the anus as feces.
Food enters the mouth, where it is chewed and mixed with saliva to form a bolus. The bolus then travels down the esophagus to the stomach, where it is broken down further by stomach acid and enzymes. From the stomach, the partially digested food moves to the small intestine, where nutrient absorption occurs. The remaining waste travels to the large intestine, where water is absorbed and solid feces are formed before being expelled through the anus.
food travels in our body in a form of liquid after they are digested