Fire!
Fire.
fire
Fire
Period
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When no one is looking get something that is the size of a coin or a coin and place it under your tong and then you hit your chest and spit the coin out. Make sure to not show the coin under your tong.
"The mouth" is an English equivalent of the French words "la bouche."Specifically, the feminine singular definite article "la" means "the." The feminine noun "bouche" means "mouth." The pronunciation is "lah boosh."
"Mouth" in English is bocca in Italian.
mouth is spelled 'bouche' (fem.) in French.
In Spanish "boca" means mouth and "raton" means rat. In actuality the phrase would have to be "boca de el raton," or "mouth of the rat" (rat's mouth) in order to be correct.
The deer most likely use their mouth or nose. They then expand their chest or lungs to withdraw the air from the atmosphere. The air then travels though the mouth or nose into the lungs.
you have to dod mouth to mouth so that if a person is not breathing then you pass air through your mouth to the other person's lungs to keep them ALIVE
The diaphragm is a sheath of muscle that separates the organs of the chest and abdomen. When you take a breath, you're flexing the diaphragm and a number of smaller muscles in your chest. This inflates the lungs, creating a partial vacuum, drawing air into your nose and mouth and into your lungs.
The human respiratory system contains two lungs, symmetrically arranged in the chest, the trachea, which leads from the lungs to the mouth and nose. This simple arrangement allows humans to breathe.
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Chest movement with the lungs inflating/deflating. Breath passing through the mouth or nose
You watch for a rise in the person's chest while blowing air into their mouth.
The respiratory system is located from your nose and mouth, all the way down to your lungs, which are in your chest area. This is how you breathe.IDK but i am going to do my best in your lungIn the head. Two paths: (nose or mouth), throat, bronchi, lungs (very grossly specified).
Severe allergic reactions (rash; hives; itching; difficulty breathing; tightness in the chest; swelling of the mouth, face, lips, or tongue); irritation
The presence of fluid and/or mucus, giving characteristic signs when listened with a stethoscope e.g. rales.
30 chest compressions before sweeping the mouth.
Into the lungs.