Paragraph: (Science-textbook/science-g4-70.txt)
Sent 1: As food is pushed along, it undergoes digestion.
Sent 2: Digestion is the process of breaking down food into nutrients.
Sent 3: There are two types of digestion: mechanical digestion and chemical digestion.
Sent 4: Mechanical digestion occurs when large chunks are turned into smaller chucks.
Sent 5: Perhaps not surprisingly, this happens when you chew your food.
Sent 6: Once you swallow the food, your stomach also does some of this work.
Sent 7: Chemical digestion occurs when food is broken down into useful nutrients.
Sent 8: This is a chemical process that begins as you start to chew your food.
Sent 9: The saliva in your mouth starts this process.
Sent 10: Once you swallow, the acid in your stomach further breaks down food.
Sent 11: From the stomach, the foods moves into the small intestine.
Sent 12: In the small intestines, another set of chemicals goes to work.
Sent 13: Are you surprised?
Sent 14: Your small intestine, and not your stomach, does most of the work!
Question: What type of digestion happens when you chew your food? (false/0)
Question: What bodily fluids aide in digestion? (false/1)
Question: What in your mouth starts the chemical digestion process? (true/2)
Question: What organs help digestion? (false/3)
Question: What does mechanical digestion involve? (true/4)
Question: Where do foods move into from stomach? (true/5)
Question: Is the acid breaking down the food in your stomach an example of mechanical or chemical digestion? (true/6)
Question: At what point does chemical digestion start? (true/7)
Question: What is mechanical digestion? (false/8)
Question: What is digestion? (false/9)
Question: What is chemical digestion, and where does it occur? (true/10)
Last updated: Mon Apr 16 04:55:33 EDT 2018
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