toe joints

  • 91Stirrup — For the bone, see stapes. For other uses of the word stirrup, see Stirrup (disambiguation). The stirrup is a ring with a flat bottom fixed on a leather strap, usually hung from each side of a saddle by an adjustable strap to create a footrest for …

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  • 92Double wishbone suspension — Wishbones and upright painted yellow In automobiles, a double wishbone (or upper and lower A arm) suspension is an independent suspension design using two (occasionally parallel) wishbone shaped arms to locate the wheel. Each wishbone or arm has… …

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  • 93Hip — For other uses of the term, see hip (disambiguation). Hip (anatomy) Bones of the hip Latin coxa Gray s …

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  • 94Metatarsophalangeal articulations — Bones of the right foot. Dorsal surface. Latin articulationes metatarsophalangeae Gray s …

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  • 95Clubbed thumb — Classification and external resources Top view of a child with asymmetric clubbed thumb …

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  • 96GALS — (standing for Gait, Arms, Legs, Spine) is a brief musculoskeletal screening test devised to detect neurological, musculoskeletal or functional deficits in patients.It consists of an initial set of screening questions and a sequence of examination …

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  • 97Human skeletal changes due to bipedalism — The evolution of bipedalism approximately four million years agocite book |author=Kondō, Shirō |title=Primate morphophysiology, locomotor analyses, and human bipedalism |publisher=University of Tokyo Press |location=Tokyo |year=1985 |pages= |isbn …

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  • 98Elbow — For other uses, see Elbow (disambiguation). Elbow Latin articulatio cubiti Gray s …

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  • 99charadriiform — ▪ bird order Introduction    any member of the large group of birds (bird) that includes the sandpipers (sandpiper), plovers (plover), gulls (gull), auks (auk), and their relatives. These birds form an important and familiar segment of the… …

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  • 100sensory reception, human — Introduction  means by which humans react to changes in external and internal environments.   Ancient philosophers called the human senses “the windows of the soul,” and Aristotle described at least five senses sight, hearing, smell, taste, and… …

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