What is a trachea?!


Question: What part does it play in singing?


Answers: What part does it play in singing?

Trachea is a common biological term for an airway through which respiratory air transport takes place in organisms.

The cells that line the trachea have minuscule hairs, which collect any dust that you inhale, and prevent it from entering your lungs. It is then removed by coughing.

To prevent food from entering your windpipe, it has a small flap of skin at the entrance (epiglottis). When you eat, this flap closes over your trachea to prevent food from entering.

Vertebrate trachea, in terrestrial vertebrates, such as birds and mammals, the trachea allows oxygen and carbon dioxide to move from the throat to the lungs
Invertebrate trachea, in terrestrial invertebrates, such as onychophorans and insects, tracheae conduct air from outside the organism directly to all internal tissues

It's part of your throat.

I Think It's Your Voice Box.

your wind-pipe.

THE HIDDEN FACTOR IN REALLY BEAUTIFUL SINGING:
TRACHEAL RESONANCE :

http://beautifulsinging.com/singing/trac...

It's a part of your throat

not sure if it's part of singing though

otherwise known as your windpipe, it's the tube forming part of the throat that leads to the lungs. your voicebox is in or near the trachea and that's part of the system that creates sound. the other parts are your lungs themselves (like when deep-voiced men make their chest cavity resonate), mouth and nasal cavities.

It's your windpipe that starts in your throat and goes down to your bronchi which split and travel to each lung. Your "voice box " is a complicated area of muscles and tendons which help to constrict and expand the trachea to produce noise.

It's the tube that connects the lungs to the larynx (voice box) to the mouth and nose. It carries your air.

Trachea is a common biological term for an airway through which respiratory air transport takes place in organisms.

The cells that line the trachea have minuscule hairs, which collect any dust that you inhale, and prevent it from entering your lungs. It is then removed by coughing.

To prevent food from entering your windpipe, it has a small flap of skin at the entrance (epiglottis). When you eat, this flap closes over your trachea to prevent food from entering.

Vertebrate trachea, in terrestrial vertebrates, such as birds and mammals, the trachea allows oxygen and carbon dioxide to move from the throat to the lungs
Invertebrate trachea, in terrestrial invertebrates, such as onychophorans and insects, tracheae conduct air from outside the organism directly to all internal tissues

Question 1) you know how to use Yahoo! Answer yet you dunno how to use Wikipedia or Google.

Question 2) trachea dont produces sound. Mayb provides the air to make the sound.

The trachea is the tube that conveys air from the nose/mouth to the lungs. This air passes through your vocal cords. You must be able to control the amount and speed of the air released from the lungs through the trachea and vocal cords to sing. This is how you control pitch and tone.

it is your voice box



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