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Answer for the clue "The blood flowing through the circulatory system ", 11 letters:
bloodstream

Alternative clues for the word bloodstream

Word definitions for bloodstream in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Bloodstream refers to vascular circulation. Bloodstream may also refer to "Bloodstream" (song) , 2014 song by Ed Sheeran "Bloodstream", song by Stateless from The Bloodstream EP "Bloodstream", song by Canterbury Effect from An Exercise in Humility "Bloodstream", ...

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
also blood-stream , 1847, from blood (n.) + stream (n.).

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ■ VERB absorb ▪ One of the processes of digestion is to reduce food to a substance which can be absorbed in the bloodstream as sugar. ▪ It is not absorbed into the bloodstream , nor does it influence hormone levels, the company ...

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. the blood flowing through the circulatory system

Usage examples of bloodstream.

An antivitamin is a substance that can prevent the absorption of vitamins into the bloodstream or, worse still, destroy a vitamin once it has been ingested.

The latest research tentatively demonstrates that the level of certain apolipoproteins in your bloodstream predicts your chances of having a heart attack even more accurately than the HDLs do.

Remoteness and exhaustion faded as the bladderwort entered his bloodstream.

Totuus was found in his system, but the NYU neurologists believe he had another compound in his bloodstream that combined with the Totuus to form a neurotoxin specific to the Broca area.

The gas was poisonous as hell, but Chev could breathe it because of self-adjusting antitoxins in his bloodstream.

This is common in large dogs, and if not treated immediately, death results as the toxic gases formed by fermentation are absorbed from the stomach into the bloodstream.

These dogs had not been tested since Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, fourteen months ago and it takes as long as one year after initial introduction of the microfilariae into the bloodstream before they become adults and produce the microfilariae in quantities large enough to be detected in microscopic examinations.

It is as if the Emersonian model of Oversoul, of a bloodstream that connects living creatures, were moved out of polite nineteenth-century rhetoric and shown to be the life-saving, corporeal principle it is.

These fats are then dumped into the bloodstream where they cause tissue damage, compromise immunity, and are stored in fat cells.

One of the many factors that influence hunger is the glycemic index, which measures how fast carbohydrates are broken down into simple sugars and moved into the bloodstream.

Now that Emily Kochi was in the medirobot, the pain of her hand already blocked, and food and medicines and fluids already flowing into her bloodstream, she was able to tell them more.

Using a combination of laparoscopic techniques, nanotech robotic drones injected into their bloodstreams, and traditional scalpel work, the urgent structural repairs were done in nineteen hours of surgery for Sarah and sixteen for Don.

In the human bloodstream they take a form known as merozoites, which burrow into the red blood cells and reproduce asexually, each one producing 6 to 26 new individuals which burst out to infect new blood cells on a cycle that repeats every forty-eight hours.

The microcircuitry inside the slender needlelike device ran through its programming, matching both genetic information and the automutating radioactive tracers that had been injected into his bloodstream.

The preborn has used the attachment tentacle on its wrist to connect itself to your bloodstream and nervous system.