The other path from the throat is the trachea, which leads to the lungs. The trachea branches into two bronchi, each entering a lung. The other path referred to might be the esophagus, which leads to the stomach and is located behind the trachea. This separation allows air to enter the lungs while food and liquids are directed to the digestive system.
Bronchus.....bronchial tube, wind pipe, etc.
The 'Bronchus' or 'Bronchial Tube'.
the epiglottis is elastic cartilage tissue that is coated in a mucous membrane that flaps over and covers the larynx in the back of the throat. More simply, it is the hangy ball in the back of your throat. Its function is to cover the trachea when swallowing to prevent food/liquids from entering the path that leads to lungs and keep it on its path down the esophagus into the digestive tract.
the esophagus or windpipe (the wrong one)
The sentence "It leads you to the path to become a successful person" is grammatically correct.
The throat is also called the pharynx and is shared with the digestive system, or gastrointestinal tract. It provides an avenue for food and liquid to find its way to the esophagus during swallowing (deglutition), and it also provides a path for air to enter the trachea on its way to the lungs.
trachea is the tube that connect the throat and lungs, while oesophagus is the tube that connect our mouth to the stomach.. so there is different tube that must not be confuse..The path of air into the lungs is mouth/nose to pharynx to windpipe (or trachea) to the bronchi to the bronchioles to the alveoli.The trachea (or windpipe) carries gases from the throat to the bronchi, which carry gases into and out of the lungs.The trachea, or windpipe, splits into two main branches called bronchi to carry air into and out of the lungsThe main large tube that carries air to the lungs is known as the trachea. From there it is divided into two branches called bronchi, which then further divide into bronchioles and further divides into alveoli.
In the human respiratory system, air goes through the mouth/oral cavity, down the throat/pharynx, glottis, trachea, one of the two bronchi that leads into a lung, further divides into bronchioles, and at last ends in the alveoli. Here, air stops in the lungs, loses oxygen to capillaries, gains carbon dioxide, and returns to the atmosphere via the same path.
Through Ivarstead up the throat of the world
The "Path" is the route map that leads to the folder that contains the "Filename"
yes it is called spring path that leads to sendoff spring
do not follow others, do what you think is best