the femur is the thighbone & there is only 1 per thigh. the lower leg has 2 bones: the tibia & the fibula.
answer your looking for is right or left depending on the view of the femur.
It depends how hard you pound. The harder you pound, the fewer times you have to do it before the femur breaks. And it also depends on how strong the femur is, and what area you spread the pound over. Different peoples femurs have different strengths.
Its when both femurs (thigh bone) are broken. They can either be closed or open. (The bone breaks through the skin or stays inline)
There are two. They are at the point where the femurs and the pelvis join.
The femur articulates with the patella, tibia, and OS coxae (hip bone). And the patella articulates with the femur only. So in all, not counting the femur and patella, two.
The femur is the long bone of the leg. The two large processes of the proximal femur are the greater and lesser trochanter.
The femur is the thighbone, which is the thickest and longest bone in the body. The adjective form for femur is femoral.
Your femur, or thighbone, is the largest bone in your body. We have 2 femur, 1 each leg. The head of your femur fits into your hip socket and the bottom end connects to your knee.
If our bodies didn't have femurs our body couldn't support all the weight we have.
femur /fe·mur/ (fe´mer) pl. fem´ora, femurs [L.]
It depends how hard you pound. The harder you pound, the fewer times you have to do it before the femur breaks. And it also depends on how strong the femur is, and what area you spread the pound over. Different peoples femurs have different strengths.
Femur Spanning from the bottom of the hip to the top of the knee, the femur's name is from the Latin word for "thigh". However the strongest bones are the teeth that are coated with the extra hard substance enamel.
Its when both femurs (thigh bone) are broken. They can either be closed or open. (The bone breaks through the skin or stays inline)
Disadvantages that grasshoppers may have with a long femur is that they have a clumsy walk. The would also have to maneuver when going in short distances.
yes, left and right femurs
I don't think there is much demand for broken femurs, so you probably wouldn't be able to get much for it. My advice would be to have an orthopedic specialist treat it, and then hang on to it for future use.
It all depends on where you broke the femur. But yes it can affect growth spurts if the breaks haven't healed properly. Make sure to drink lots of milk!
The neck of the femur is bounded by the Greater and Lesser Trochanters.