No.
You can sprain a joint - not a bone.
You can fracture the collar bone (clavicle) or strain the acromiclavicular joint (where the colalr bone meets the shoulder - aka "a separated shoulder) and also injure the sternoclavicular joint (where the collar bone meets the breast bone).
naw ya mad goon ! Actually it is very possible and try speaking the proper English language you freaking idiot!(not the asker the answerer it helps the asker understand!)
Yes, you can dislocate a rib.
Certainly
Yes, The clavicle and the collarbone are the same thing.
The human collarbone is the clavicle.
A sprain is a stretch or tear of a ligament.
.07 pounds
yes.
Yes. A dog does have a collarbone. It is by there chest and since the chest is so thick you can not feel the collarbone.
scapula is the Latin for collarbone
Collarbone - band - was created in 2000.
Yes, The clavicle and the collarbone are the same thing.
Technically you can not sprain your pelvis it's self. You can sprain your hip however, this is because a sprain is located in a joint.
A sprain is soft tissue damage. You cannot sprain a bone. You can sprain your thumb, just not the bone itself.
The future tense is "will sprain"
No. Layman's term for scapula is "shoulder blade". The "collarbone" is the claivcle.
The human collarbone is the clavicle.
A sprain of the lumbar vertebrata.
to sprain (verb) = naká (× ×§×¢) sprain (noun) = néka (× ×§×¢)
An ankle sprain