This is just a fancy word for eating or "taking in food."
What is Ingestion?
When you use your teeth to grind and Crunch your lunch you're doing this type of digestion.
What is Mechanical?
These are the special substances that help chemical digestion actually work.
What are Enzymes?
This is the muscular tube that acts like a slide to push food to your stomach.
What is the Esophagus?
This is the stuff where you actually get rid of the waste ( aka: going to the bathroom ).
What is Elimination?
This type of digestion uses chemical reactions to turn food into tiny molecules.
What is Chemical?
Enzymes are actually made of this, which is also a nutrient found in meat and beans.
What is Protein?
This organ is basically a muscular sac that turns your food into a liquid mixture.
What is the Stomach?
This is the main event where your body actually breaks the food down.
What is Digestion?
These two things in your mouth are the main parts of the mechanical digestion.
What are Teeth and Tongue?
Without enzymes, the chemical reactions in your body would be too ___ to work.
What is Slow?
This "long tube" is the spot where most of the digestion in nutrient-grabbing happens.
What is the Small Intestine?
This happens mostly in the small intestine where your body grabs a nutrients it needs.
What is Absorption?
Chewing food into smaller pieces help this type of digestion work better.
What is Chemical?
True or false: Your body only has one kind of enzyme that does every single job.
What is False?
This organs main job is to soak up water and handle the leftover waste.
What is the Large Intestine?
Name all four steps in order that happen to food when you eat it.
What are Ingestion, Digestion, Absorption, and Elimination?
Mechanical digestion gives food more of this, which helps the chemicals touch more of the food.
What is Surface Area?
These are the smaller things that enzymes break big food molecules into.
What are Smaller Molecules?
In my slides I mention three other organs that help the digestive tract.
What are the Liver, Gallbladder, and Pancreas?