Air can enter through cuts in the skin, especially if they are deep or extensive. This can increase the risk of infection as well as delay the healing process. It's important to clean and cover any cuts to prevent unwanted contaminants from entering the body.
Air can enter your body through the nose and mouth when you inhale. It can also enter through the trachea, also known as the windpipe, which connects the nose and mouth to the lungs.
When you breathe you suck air from your mouth or nose!
Smell travels through the air as tiny molecules released from objects or substances. These molecules move through the air and enter our noses when we breathe in, where they are detected by special cells in our nasal cavity that send signals to our brain, allowing us to perceive the smell.
Smells travel through the air as invisible molecules released from objects or substances. When we breathe in, these molecules enter our nose and bind to receptors in our nasal cavity, sending signals to our brain that we interpret as different scents.
Sound energy travels through your ears. Sound waves are transferred through the air and enter the ear canal, where they vibrate the eardrum and are processed by the inner ear to be interpreted by the brain as sound.
Air enters through the trachea and into the lungs.
ingestion, inhalation, cuts, and through holes
To allow the air to enter the body. The air can enter through either the nose or through the mouth.
To allow the air to enter the body. The air can enter through either the nose or through the mouth.
Microorganisms can enter the body through various routes including inhalation of contaminated air, ingestion of contaminated food or water, direct contact with infected individuals, and through breaks in the skin such as cuts or wounds. Once inside the body, microorganisms can travel to different parts and cause infections.
THROUGH THE NOSE AND THROUGH THE MOUTH
cuts or mucous membranes ingestion of food and water inhalation
Through your nose and mouth.
Germs can enter the body through various routes, including the respiratory tract via inhalation of contaminated air or droplets from sneezes and coughs. They can also penetrate through breaks in the skin, such as cuts or abrasions, during direct contact with infected surfaces or objects. Additionally, germs can enter through the digestive system when consuming contaminated food or water.
You need to make it streamlined at the front so it cuts through the air therefore making it move faster.
THE NOSE AND OF COURSE THE MOUTH..................
Through any opening in the body - eyes, mouth, nose... etc. and through any breaks in the surface of the skin, cuts and scratches. Some of them enter in the food we eat.