The small intestine is the part of the gastrointestinal tract between the stomach and large intestine. The three parts that make up the small intestine are the duodenum, the jejunum, and ileum.
The ileum is not a cell, tissue, or organ; rather, it is a specific part of the small intestine, which is an organ in the digestive system. The ileum is the final section of the small intestine and is responsible for the absorption of nutrients and bile salts. It is made up of various tissues, including epithelial, connective, muscle, and nervous tissues, which work together to facilitate its functions.
small intestine, and water absorption occurs in the colon/large intestine
it goes to the large intestine
The small intestine of a koala is smaller than its caecum, which is up to 2.5m in length and connects the small and large intestines. The small intestine itself is about one metre long.
The first answer was a good answer, except it wasn't the answer to the question. Both small and large are part of the digestive system. So yes, the intestine is an organ.
The section of the small intestine where nutrients are absorbed are the jejunum and the ileum. Once the digestive process takes place in the small intestine, food particles go to the large intestine.
The large intestines "soaks up" the nutrients and the small intestines packs and stored the waste.
The small intestines are connected to the stomach and the large intestine. The spot where the large intestine is connected to the small intestine is called the cecum. A typical colonoscopy will go up to but not beyond the cecum.
Small intestine is where the blood picks up nutrients from what has been eaten
regurgitation
The small intestine.