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Hip and shoulder joints are two examples in humans of ball and sOcket joints
Hip and shoulder are both Ball and Socket Joints
4: the shoulder joints and the hip joints.
Both joints are enarthrodial (ball and socket joints), but the hip is more stable than the shoulder. This is out of necessity because the hip must support the weight of the body, while the shoulder does not have to. The cup in the hip that the head of the femur sits in is deeper than that of the shoulder holding the head of the humerus. This means less movement for the hip, but more stability.
your shoulder is a ball and socket join and your hip and femur form one as well.
Some examples are the shoulder and the hip.
Hip and shoulder joints are two examples in humans of ball and sOcket joints
You have ball and socket type of joints, in the both shoulder and hip joints.
The shoulder and hip joints.
Both the hip and shoulder joints are referred to as ball and socket joints.
in the hip or shoulder joints
Hip and shoulder are both Ball and Socket Joints
the hip and shoulder are examples of a ball-and-socket joint.
4: the shoulder joints and the hip joints.
shoulder and hip
Both joints are enarthrodial (ball and socket joints), but the hip is more stable than the shoulder. This is out of necessity because the hip must support the weight of the body, while the shoulder does not have to. The cup in the hip that the head of the femur sits in is deeper than that of the shoulder holding the head of the humerus. This means less movement for the hip, but more stability.
Ball-and-Socket Joints. Smooth, hemispherical head fits within a cuplike socket. Only mutiaxial joints in the body are the shoulder joint - head of humerus into glenoid cavity of scapula and the hip joint - head of femur into acetabulum of hip bone.