In 1875 some of the most distinguished surgeons and physicians of Great Britain testified before the Royal Commission that as medical students they had never witnessed an experiment on a living animal.
By various experiments he discovered that the blood of a living animal is subject to a definite pressure, and with some approach to accuracy he succeeded in measuring it.
The death of one part of an animal body, while the rest continues to live; loss of vitality in some part of a living animal; gangrene.
That which is quick, or alive; a living animal or plant; especially, the hawthorn, or other plants used in making a living hedge.
You immediately infer that this skeleton once belonged to a living animal, that breathed, and fed, and walked about, exactly as animals do now.
The bone is deposited, atom by atom, in living organic cells, which are formed by living blood, which implies a living animal.
On these premises you build the conclusion that a skeleton must, at some time or other, have belonged to a living animal.
An animal that has bled so freely as to be at the point of dying, is promptly brought back to life by an operation called transfusion, by which fresh blood from a living animal is injected into the blood-vessels of his body.
If the trachea, or windpipe, of a living animal be so compressed as to exclude the air from the lungs, the blood in the arteries will gradually grow darker, until its color is the same as that of the venous blood.
By vivisection, or the laying bare of some organ of a living animal, we are able to investigate certain vital processes which are too deeply hidden in the human body to be studied directly.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "living animal" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.