No, even if you were traveling at 70 mph on a motorcycle, it will not break your neck.
yes
If it is an interference engine the valves can bend/break.
The labium is the lower lip of the grasshopper. It has a sharp edge that allows the animal to break up food.
If your timing belt were to break while the engine is operating, the camshafts would be out of time with the crankshaft. This 'out of time' would cause the valves to open at incorrect times in regard to the crankshaft/pistons. This break in the timing belt could cause valves to bend or break as well as damage the head itself; pistons could also become damaged in the process.
on some engine designs when the timing slips or is wrong the valve train will hit the pistons. something has to break, the valves, pistons, or the rods will bend.
The mouth parts and jaws of a grasshopper must be strong. This is to allow the grasshopper to chew its food and break down plants that make up their diet.
It can break with out warning.
The gizzard is part of the grasshopper's digestive system. Grasshoppers' gizzards are used to help break down and digest the food they eat.
The future perfect tense of "break" is "will have broken."
Yes, but some had a very thick teflon coating that could break off and mess up the timing..
www.nhtsa.gov Could be the timing tensioner about to break. Really sucks when that happens because there is absolutely no room to work on the timing while the motor is in the car. But, it can be done.
The present perfect tense of "break" is "has/have broken." For example, "I have broken my phone."