Dust and bacteria are trapped and swallowed at the back of the throat by a cilia cell.
Dirt and bacteria are trapped and swallowed at the back of the throat by cilia cells.
Mucus and dust are two things that are trapped and swallowed at the back of the throat by cilia cells.
Mucus and dust are trapped and swallowed at the back of your throat by a cilia cell.
Mucus and dust are two things that are trapped and swallowed at the back of the throat by cilia cells.
The two things that are trapped and swallowed at the back of the throat by cilia cells are saliva and food. Medicines in the form of pills can also be trapped and swallowed, but trapped pills might make the person choke instead of swallow.
The two things that are trapped and swallowed at the back of the throat by cilia cells are saliva and food. Medicines in the form of pills can also be trapped and swallowed, but trapped pills might make the person choke instead of swallow.
well basically the ciliated cells line all the air passages in your lungs.they have tiny hairs which filter the air as it blows through the hairs also sweep mucus (snot) with trapped dust and bacteria up to the back of the throat where it is swallowed.
Microorganisms trapped in the mucus of the nasal cavity are usually moved by the cilia towards the back of the throat and swallowed. From there, they enter the digestive system where they are exposed to stomach acid that can help kill them.
The epiglottis is a flap of tissue at the back of the throat that prevents food from going into trachea when being swallowed .
these are called cilia cells, and they trap the dust and stuff (it's trapped by mucus) that enters your breathing passages. this is then moved by the action of the cells up the breathing passages and into the back of the throat and nose where it can be swallowed
It sounds like "eel ay-cree-VAHN" with the final N sound 'swallowed' in the back of the throat.
Mostly the skin, which is quite water-proof. (And dust proof.) The nose also helps, but the finer dist is trapped in the mucous of the airways thanks to the turbulence produced by the "vocal cords" during inspiration. (From there its brought to the back of the throat where it is either swallowed or coughed out.)