No, because the clavicle is also called the collar bone. The neck vertebrae separate these bones.
Yes, teeth are connected to the skull through the jawbone, which is part of the skull. The roots of the teeth are embedded in the jawbone, providing support and stability for the teeth.
Suture bones are found in the skull. They are called skull bones and are connected by sutures.
The front part of the skull (frontal bone) is the bone that is connected by the frontal suture.
The chest bones connected to the back bone. The back bones connected to the head bone. The hyoid bone's connected to the.... nothing, exept muscles.
Your jaw, or your mandible bone.
The skull, ribs, and toe bones are not connected to the knee joint.
your pelvis is connected to your femur, your femurs connected to your patella, your patellas connected to your tibia, your tibias connected to your fibula, your fibulas connected to your tarsal bones, your tarsal bones connected to your metatarsal bones, your metatarsal bones connected to your phalanges, your phalanges are connected to.... your toe nails?
The jowl is another name for the jaw or the cheek bone. The jaw bone is known as the mandible and is connected to the cranium. Together they are known as the skull.
well the skull grows until all the plates finally mean. the area where they meet is connected by a tissue called sutures which is a non movable ligament to hold bones together
The part of the skeleton called the skull is the head.
Nope. The brain is not technically connected, though there IS a special fluid in which the brain floats around in within the skull that prevents it from smashing against the skull (usually). Sometimes, though even a modified water-substance cannot withstand too much force forward or backward. However, this doesn't mean your brain is just a large floating mass of nerves away from everything. It's connected to your cerebral and visceral cortexes, which help you to make decisions and do things.
The lower jaw bone (mandible) is the only bone connected to the skull by a freely movable joint, known as the temporomandibular joint (TMJ). This joint allows for actions such as chewing, speaking, and yawning.