Humans produce saliva to be able to break down food in their mouths to further ready it for digestion. Saliva contains different enzymes that break apart the food, making it possible to swallow big pieces of steak and apple and salad and so on.
The tongue does not sweat. However, you can salivate, which makes the mouth moist to wet. Without saliva, you can have dental cavities, gum disease, and very bad breath.
Humans have 46 chromosomes.
No, it is not found in humans
NO
humans
Yes, salivate is a verb.
to salivate
salivate= to produce salivaHe's been salivating over the latest model sports car for a while now.
yes
salivary glands
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The cast of Salivate - 2006 includes: Macey Alexis Mott as Angela Larry Laverty as Tony Ken Rothwell as Ed
drool in anticipation
Do you mean "salivation" (to salivate) or salvation (being saved)
There is no tone that causes a dog to salivate; you need to train a particular dog to do that as it is a learned behavior. You might want to read about the apparently not-so-famous experiment by Ivan Pavlov.
Not every dog drools, but many dogs do. When dogs salivate, the saliva can drool out the corners of their flues if they have loose or baggy flues: unlike humans, dogs cannot pucker or close their lips (flues) tightly. Salivation an be triggered by something that the dog wants to eat, or it may simply happen naturally throughout the day, depending on the breed.