ingestión
21ingestion — noun see ingest …
22INGESTION — n. f. T. de Physiologie Introduction des aliments ou des boissons par la bouche dans l’estomac …
23ingestion — taking in food, usually by swallowing …
24ingestion — n. [L. ingestus, taken in] The act or process of swallowing or taking in food material into a cell or into the enteron …
25ingestion — See ingestible. * * * …
26ingestion — noun the action of ingesting, or consuming something orally, whether it be food, drink, medicine, or other substance. It is usually referred to as the first step of digestion …
27ingestion — 1. Introduction of food and drink into the stomach. 2. Incorporation of particles into the cytoplasm of a phagocytic cell by invagination of a portion of the cell membrane as a vacuole. [L. in gero, to carry in] …
28ingestion — (in jé stion) s. f. Terme de physiologie. Introduction des aliments ou des boissons, par la bouche dans l estomac. ÉTYMOLOGIE Lat. ingestionem, de ingerere (voy. incérer 2) …
29ingestion — Synonyms and related words: ablation, absorption, appetite, assimilation, attrition, bile, burning up, cannibalism, carnivorism, carnivority, carnivorousness, chewing, consumption, cropping, deglutition, depletion, devouring, devourment, dieting …
30INGESTION — (Roget s Thesaurus II) Index noun bite, cook, delicacy, drop, feast, food (2), harvest, serving adjective delicate, delicious …