Swallowing during sleep occurs infrequently, typically ranging from several times an hour to just a few times throughout the night. The frequency can vary based on factors such as hydration levels, sleep position, and the presence of any underlying conditions like sleep apnea. During deeper stages of sleep, swallowing is less common due to reduced muscle activity. Overall, it is a natural and involuntary process that helps maintain moisture in the throat.
Generally, but not always the case. Spit you don't swallow is called drool.
Cut them up
Yes, people who chew their hair often swallow it and sometimes get hairballs.
the number is on average, it can change depending on where you live, what you are doing, etc. the most common way you swallow seven spiders a year is that when you are sleeping, they just simply crawl into your mouth :) gross..
A barium swallow is often called an upper GI series.
you get some water and a pill and put the pill in your mouth and take a drink of water then swallow or just chew it but that is gross but it is harder to swallow the pill than chew it!
In the Book of Tobit in the Bible, Tobit was blinded by bird droppings that fell into his eyes while he was sleeping outside.
so people say dont believe in it tho!!! only if your unlucky ha ha ha
about 7
well if u don't drink water u possibly can i would think
It's military parlance for "sleeping time". When soldiers are out fighting in a war, they often sleep in sleeping bags. "Sack" is another name for a "bag"- in fact, when I was in the US Army, we often called sleeping bags "fart sacks".
Also known as the South African Swallow (Hirundo spilodera/Petrochelidon spilodera), the African Swallow is a small cliff swallow about the size of a house sparrow. The swallows nest in colonies in gourd-shaped nests made of small mud pellets, often on large man-made structures.