Tract in a sentence as a noun

Try getting laid when your GI tract is in rebellion.

Your digestive tract decides to stop digesting, and passes the food through unmodified3.

Herbivores need much more of their tract relatively to survive.

I couldn't believe this guy who lived in the same tract house he had been living in for years was a millionaire.

Yeah, it seems to me that the first problem with not giving your GI tract food is that it could make your GI tract atrophy.

I take a harder tract - I used to force myself stay away from my cellphone and put social interactions first.

I just recently bought a Moleskine with an abstract graphic image of an audiocassette on it.

Our fine-tuned digestive tract contains an organ which occasionally bursts.

[Edit] Fair enough, parent didn't say "****" "intestine" "digestive tract" or anything more specific.

"Home" is based on tract housing from the 1950s; yet even if home to you is an apartment, condo unit, palace, or boat, that icon still means "home".There's another example.

They try to imitate human speech which takes enormous effort on their part because unlike for example parrots their vocal tract is not conducive for this at all.

Even if it did survive the digestive tract, interactions with foods that altered the effective dose, or sped up or slowed absorption, would be likely to sink it in actual use.

The Cry protein works by aggregating into crystals in the lepidopteran larval digestive tract which then pierce the lining of the midgut, killing the larva.

Our stomach capacity relative to our body size is almost exactly within carnivore parameters and we pass food out of our stomach and into our intestinal tract about as quickly.

In the case of an airborne virus like influenza, you have infection via the upper respiratory tract from viral particles that survive for extended amounts of time in aerosols suspended in the air.

I think a good practical recommendation that is great in many aspects is to take a short break every 2 hours or so and get just 5 minutes of exercise done, just enough to get the heart beating a bit faster and the blood circulating, it can be just basic stretching or isometric contractions, whatever you are able to easily execute in your office environment.

I referred to this NGM article in another sub-parent comment here, but I think it contains very relevant on-topic animal intelligence language-related insights, so posting a link and a couple of short excerpts from it here: Under Pepperberg’s patient tutelage, Alex [a parrot] learned how to use his vocal tract to imitate almost one hundred English words, including the sounds for all of these foods, although he calls an apple a “banerry.”\n\n “Apples taste a little bit like bananas to him, and they look a little bit like cherries, so Alex made up that word for them,” Pepperberg said.\n\n [...]\n\n [...] because Alex was able to produce a close approximation of the sounds of some English words, Pepperberg could ask him questions about a bird’s basic understanding of the world.

Tract definitions

noun

an extended area of land

See also: parcel

noun

a system of body parts that together serve some particular purpose

noun

a brief treatise on a subject of interest; published in the form of a booklet

See also: pamphlet

noun

a bundle of myelinated nerve fibers following a path through the brain

See also: pathway