Mouth | Gastrointestinal system physiology | NCLEX-RN | Khan Academy
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- čas přidán 14. 05. 2014
- Created by Raja Narayan.
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I am so so happy that there's a whole series of the digestive system - thank you Khan Academy! Thank you Dr. Raja!
4:32 - its kind of MOUTHFUL......
you are welcome...
I just love your videos. Thank you so much.
PS, your voice sounds like Ian Somerhalder's voice A.K.A Damon Salvatore from The Vampire Diaries, that makes it so much worth listening to. Just saying.
Really :P
OMG,you are sooo right!! I was like it's Damon/Ian and damn it sounds amazing.
i was just watching vampire dairies and i dont think it does ian's voice is far deeper
i know ur comment is from six years ago but i dont care
Small correction: The tongue is called Lingua, not lingula. Lingula is a diminutive form of the word, used for various other structures like the lingula of the left lung.
khan academy is better than crash course.
amazing to find your videos and super thanks to make it very interesting
Excellent breakdown of very complex but crucial information, greatly appreciated! had to subscribe!
you are awesome...thank you so much!
Thank you so much ❤ Your explanations is always worth the time we used.
this is beautiful
you really good and best....
thank you so much
Nice I'm enjoying this
i want this guys handwritting...his skills with mouse are at 9999999999999 lvl
Thank you!!!
thanks
Thank you for the video.
At the end, it is the bacteria that feeds on the glucose converting it to acid, that corrodes the teeth.
Hydroxyl group in glucose doesnt contributes to acidicity.
(Correct me if I am wrong)
Nice job 👍🏾
Best 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Nothing is better than ??????
When he said the mouth has multiple names and he didn't list one as being "pie hole" I must admit I was a tad disappointed.
Pls more detailes this is only summary
How do I check the ph level in my mouth? :D
+DinomodeX pH paper
You sound like chris evans
Can someone tell me whether sublingual gland is an extrinsic or intrinsic salivary gland?
Extrinsic, but i'm sure you found it by now.
Intrinsic and extrinsic is in reference to muscles, right?
Between 100 and 105%?
I honestly feel bad for English people who have all these complex different names for the same organs.
Because those fancy other names usually come from Latin and in Romance languages our entire languages come from Latin, so "those fancy names" are very similar if not equal to how we commonly call things.
me too =)))))))) honestly i envy english for lots of things,i learn better in english ,even tho it's not my first language,i understand things better ,but when i hear that it's hard because they "come from latin"=)))it cracks me up
No here is not everything
I have some more information
there's not a lot of details in the video, everything mentionned here is obvious so it's not helpful :(
Well it helped me a lot, for one...