It is just between your external ear and your middle ear.
in the ear.
"ear drum"
there are 3 part's... the outer ear, the inner ear, and the middle ear. all of these are responsible for hearing but the inner is for balance also.
Basically, the auditory canal links the outer ear to the ear drum. It carries the vibrations from outer ear to the inner ear.
The inner, outer and middle. The outer ear is the bit stuck to the side of your head and the ear canal down to the ear drum. The middle ear is an air-filled cavity behind the ear drum, where the 3 smallest bones in the human body are found. The inner ear is made up of the hearing organ (the cochlea) and the organ responsible for sensing motion and gravity which helps us balance.
the stirrup connects to the outer ear to the inner ear
well... if you see the fish's ear on the outside then it has an outer ear but if not then the fish has an inner ear.
The stirrup connects the outer ear to the inner ear
You don't hear anything. They don't actually have to get there through the outer ear. If your ear is plugged, or if your 'tympanum' (ear drum) is broken, the vibrations can conduct through the bone that you feel behind your ear. But they do have to get to the inner ear somehow. If vibrations don't reach the cochlea in the inner ear, then you don't hear anything.
to transmit sound entering the outer ear to the bones of the middle ear
It may rupture the ear drum and injure the outer,middle and inner ear.
outer ear
The tympanic membrane or ear drum and the external auditory meatus