First Book in Physiology: For the Use of Schools and Families |
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Page 12
... object then of eating and drinking and breathing and having the blood circulate , is to make machinery for the mind to use . 12. There is one difference between the machinery of the body and the machines constructed by man , that I have ...
... object then of eating and drinking and breathing and having the blood circulate , is to make machinery for the mind to use . 12. There is one difference between the machinery of the body and the machines constructed by man , that I have ...
Page 21
... object of this is as the chest moves in breathing , the lungs rub a little against the walls of the chest ; but the smooth shining serous membrane that lines them pre- vents the rubbing from doing any harm . The same thing is true of ...
... object of this is as the chest moves in breathing , the lungs rub a little against the walls of the chest ; but the smooth shining serous membrane that lines them pre- vents the rubbing from doing any harm . The same thing is true of ...
Page 30
... object of this arrange- ment is plain . The bile is needed in the intestine in considerable quantity whenever there is chyme there for the a bile to act upon . But the liver is a large organ , or a large factory , as we may call it ...
... object of this arrange- ment is plain . The bile is needed in the intestine in considerable quantity whenever there is chyme there for the a bile to act upon . But the liver is a large organ , or a large factory , as we may call it ...
Page 32
... object of all this apparatus is to ex- tract the chyle , the nutritious part of the food , and pour it into the blood . It is in this way that blood is made out of our food . The blood , the building mate- rial of the body , is all the ...
... object of all this apparatus is to ex- tract the chyle , the nutritious part of the food , and pour it into the blood . It is in this way that blood is made out of our food . The blood , the building mate- rial of the body , is all the ...
Page 43
... object of the machinery of the circulation is to get the blood into the network of the capillaries , and then bring it back to the beart . It is when the blood is in these capillaries that it is used for building How does the stream of ...
... object of the machinery of the circulation is to get the blood into the network of the capillaries , and then bring it back to the beart . It is when the blood is in these capillaries that it is used for building How does the stream of ...
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Common terms and phrases
acid gas air-cells animals aorta apparatus arteries auricle bellows body brain breast-bone breathing building called capillaries carbonic acid carbonic acid gas cavity chain of bones changed chapter chest chinery chyle chyme circulation cles comes concert of action contracts cords daguerreotyping dark blood drum duct elbow-joint fastened feel fibres fingers fluid foot formative vessels front gall-bladder glands goes grinding hand head hearing heart hinge-joint images instrument intestines joint kinds larynx ligaments liver look lower jaw lungs membrane messages mind motion mouth muscles act muscles that move nerves nervous organs oxygen parietal bones particles pass pull red blood repairing represented in Fig respiration retina right auricle sent serous membrane shape shoulder-joint side skin socket sound spinal column stomach structures substance tear-gland tears teeth tendons thing tion tube ulna valves variety veins ventricle vertebræ vibration winding passages windpipe
Popular passages
Page 112 - BO many different bones, instead of being one solid, tight box. If a blow be received on the head, these bones give a little upon each other, as it is expressed, and so they are not often broken. They give more in the child than in the adult, because, besides being less brittle, they are less tightly put together. It is well that it is so ; for if it were not, the skull would often be fractured, in the frequent falls which the child has. 9. The bones on the top of the head are fastened together by...
Page 2 - Also several other Text Books by good Authors, for which, see our Catalogue, which is furnished gratis. We furnish to Teachers for Examination, postpaid by mail, a copy of any of the above books not having a * annexed, at half price. Those marked with a * we send on receipt of the prices annexed.
Page 169 - It is often produced by the vibration of the air. This is the case in whistling. In the flute it is the vibration of the air in the instrument that produces the sound. And so of other similar instruments. 3. When the vibrations are equal, the sound is a musical one. But when they are irregular, the sound is a noise, that is, a confused sound. 4. Sound passes through the air by vibrations. It may be said to pass by waves in all directions, just as waves go in all directions on the surface of water...
Page 2 - BULLIONS' SERIES OF GRAMMARS, ETC. INTRODUCTION TO ANALTT. AND PEAC. GRAMMAR. 40cts. ANALYTICAL AND PRACTICAL ENGLISH GRAMMAR. 75 cents. EXERCISES IN ANALYSIS AND PARSING. 1R cents. LATIN LESSONS, by Spencer, 75 cents, introductory to Bullions
Page 54 - ... supply of impure air afforded by the Yoga exercises, we should aim at a large supply of pure air. How is this to be secured ? The air we breathe goes down into the lungs, which are full of small air cells, somewhat like a sponge. As a sponge is much larger when its cells are filled with water than when dry, so the lungs swell out when their cells are filled with air. How many little air cells are there in the lungs ? About sixty lakhs ! The air after staying a little time in the air cells, goes...