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Answer:
Mouth: The digestive process starts in your mouth when you chew. Your salivary glands make saliva, a digestive juice, which moistens food so it moves more easily through your esophagus into your stomach. Saliva also has an enzyme that begins to break down starches in your food.
Pharynx: It receives food and air from the mouth, and air from the nasal cavities.
Esophagus: the esophagus receives food from your mouth when you swallow.
Stomach: It takes in food from the esophagus, mixes it, breaks it down, and then passes it on to the small intestine in small portions.
Small Intestine: The small intestine carries out most of the digestive process, absorbing almost all of the nutrients you get from foods into your bloodstream.
Large Intestine: The purpose of the large intestine is to absorb water and salts from the material that has not been digested as food, and get rid of any waste products left over. By the time food mixed with digestive juices reaches your large intestine, most digestion and absorption has already taken place.
Rectum: The rectum stores the stool until you feel the need to have a bowel movement. Muscles of your rectum then push the stool through your anus and out of your body.
Anus: The anus is the opening at the far end of the digestive tract through which stool leaves the body.
Liver: Your liver makes a digestive juice called bile that helps digest fats and some vitamins. Bile ducts carry bile from your liver to your gallbladder for storage, or to the small intestine for use.
Pancreas: your pancreas makes pancreatic juices called enzymes.
Gallbladder: the bile passes to the gallbladder which concentrates and stores it for later use
Blood: blood transports nutrients and hormones
Explanation: