stive System
Do you know what happens to food when you eat it?
First you put food into your mouth.Then your teeth and
saliva break down the food into smaller pieces, so your esophagus can push it
down.
Next the food goes inside your stomach. The food gets broken
down into molecules by the acid in the stomach. After that the blood vessels
take it to where it’s needed. The blood vessels are like streets and vehcicles
at the same time.
The liver is an important part of the digestive process. It
takes out the parts in the food we don’t need. It’s like a dishwasher that
washes the dirty bits away from our dishes.
Finally the waste turns into poop. But instead of falling
down the bum, it gets pushed down.
By Dylan Chen
The Digestive System
Did you know that before you eat, when you smell tasty food,
see it or think about it, digestion begins? Saliva comes into your mouth.
First you break the food down in your mouth with your teeth
and your saliva.
Then we swallow the food into the esophagus. The esophagus
is like a stretchy pipe that’s about 10 inches (25 cms) long. It pushes the
food down into the stomach.
Your stomach which is attached to the end of the esophagus,
is a sack shaped like the letter ‘J”. It has three important jobs:
1)
To store the food you’ve eaten;
2)
Break down food into a liquid mixture;
3)
Slowly empty that liquidy mixture into the small
intestine.
Your food may spend as long as four hours in the small
intestine. At 3 or 4 inches around (about 7 to 10 cms), the large intestine is
fatter than the small intestine. From here the blood vessels transport the tiny
parts of our food that are important for us all over the body.
I hope you learned something.
By Jane Shirokova
Illustration by Jane and Chene
Our body
Our body
First you put the food into your mouth and the teeth crunch it into smaller pieces. Second you swallow the food down.The esophagus squeezes it down and it goes sliding down your throat and it goes into your stomach.
Then in the stomach the food breaks down into tiny, tiny bits you can't even see the tiny food and when it breaks down and it goes into the intestines.
Finally your food molecules go into the intestines and then it goes into your blood.
By Chene
Digestion
First
you put the food into your mouth and the teeth crunch it into smaller pieces.
Second,
you swallow the food down the esophagus and it squeezes it down.
Then
the food goes into the stomach to break it down into tiny, tiny bits you can't
even see any more.
Next
it goes into the intestines. Your food may spend as long as 4 hours in the
small intestine as it goes into the blood.
Finally the blood transports the nutrient to where it is needed in
the body.
The liver cleans out the waste. Most of the waste stays inside the
liver and some come out as urine.
By Yasmin Ribeiro
Digestion
– What’s That?
We
are talking about digestion today. Firstly, we talk about your teeth. The teeth
can chop up any hard food, they make you taste every little flavour in those
little bits of food.
Secondly
there has always been and always will be the esophagus. It squeezes the food
down into the stomach.Guess what, everything in your esophagus is turning and
wiggling around and round until it squeezes the food from the esophagus to the
stomach.
In
the stomach there is acid, yeah there is acid in our stomach, which breaks the
food up and the food is turning, spinning and wiggling and becomes very, very
messy.
Let's
move on to the small intestine. The food goes and travels around the whole
place, it swirls around, moving on further and further into the small intestine
to the large intestine.
The
large intestine, well as you can tell by the name, it is larger than the small
intestine. Probably if you went into the small and large intestine, it would be
pretty gross. Again the food travels and glides on,through the hole of the
small intestine and goes out of your body. This how it all works.
Finally the blood transports the nutrients to the liver. The liver cleans out the waste most of the waste stays inside the liver and some come out as urine.
By Josh Heijn
The digestive system
Firstly I will tell you about the esophagus. The esophagus is
where your food goes down. Most people believe that it just falls down your
throat but it doesn't just fall. The muscles squeeze the food down like you
squeeze toothpaste out of a tube. That's the interesting bit about your
esophagus.
Secondly we go to the stomach. The food goes into your stomach and
it tumbles the food causing it to break apart. Then the acid breaks it into
little pieces.
The food that survives goes down the small intestines and it
slides down it. It tumbles the food like the stomach but in a small tunnel.
Finally you go to your big intestine. Your big intestine is where
your waste comes from. By waste I mean what goes down the toilet. It's poop and
pee okay.
By Jack Heijn

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