1. Thigh joint 2. wrist joint 3.shoulder joint 4.knee joint 5.elbow joint :P
That's a tall order. I may need a lever to get up that high. For all the tools I will mention, some of them from a lever when you hold onto them and use them, others are levers in themselves. Let's have some fun, so here we go. First Class levers are like a teeter-totter or see-saw, a pair of scissors - which is two 1st class levers together, but I'll count as just one. There is also one in your elbow, one in your ankle, and another one in your jaw. That makes five. Second Class levers can be found in wheelbarrows, nutcrackers, your jaw and ankle, and vise grips; that's five again. Let's make it six with a canoe paddle, it's also a second class lever when you paddle with it in water. The last one is the easiest: Third Class levers can be found in lots more places, they are much more common. Here's a short, but diverse list: broom, fishing pole, hammer, your knee, pen, pencil, the joints in your fingers and toes not counting the first knuckle, a tennis racket, oh shucks just about every sporting device that you swing is a 3rd class lever when in use. The gas peddle in your car. Chopsticks, wooden spoons, fork, knife, spoon, toothbrush. And there are a whole lot more of all three.
bikechainsawcarsmotercycleschairThe energy possessed by a moving body is called its kinetic energy. Five examples of such bodies are: a flying airplane, a moving ship, flowing water, swaying leaves and a running man.
How fast something is going can be described in two ways. The most common is speed. This is simply the distance a body moves in a set time, if a body moves ten metres in two seconds its speed is five metres per second. The other way is mostly used in things like physics. It is called velocity, and simply means the speed of a body in a certain direction, ie. five metres per second northwards.
because water is dencer than air
11 lbs in five kilos.
The five types of joints found in the body are 1)ball in socket 2)gliding 3)hinge 4)pivot 5)fixed
There are joints that move back and forth ( elbow ) and other joints that move in a circle ( hip, ankle, shoulder. )
there are actually five types of joints in the human body. the two types that are most commonly referred to are the ball and socket (hips and shoulders) and the hinged (knees and elbows). the other types of joints are: immobile joints (the joining of bones in the skull); semi-mobile joints (in the ribs and vertebra, offering limited range of motion); cartilagenous joints (the joints between the vertebra in the spinal column, cartilage between the bones allows for motion) information found at infovisual.info.
five joints and a hand job
Each of the bee's legs has five separate parts, the coxa, trochanter, femur, tibia and tarsus. Joints separate each of these parts, so each leg has five joints including the one connecting the leg to the thorax.
it stood 3 to five feet tall with an ape like body with a lower jaw and a forged head long but skinny arms small heel bone small hip knee and heel joints and large teeth
ankles wrist knuckles toes arms
Polyarticular JRA affects five or more joints simultaneously. This type of JRA usually affects the small joints of both hands and both feet, although other large joints may be affected as well.
sliding friction is when you are sliding
the five important things in your body is your eyes,hearing,feeling,happyness,and laughing.
Arthritis refers to to over a hundred different diseases that effect the function of of the joints in the body. These can be the result of or include trauma wear and tear, immune disorders chemical imbalances in the blood or in some case viral or bacterial infections, What they often have in common is periods of inflammation cartilage damage pain and stiffness or malfunction of the sinovial joints of the body
That's a tall order. I may need a lever to get up that high. For all the tools I will mention, some of them from a lever when you hold onto them and use them, others are levers in themselves. Let's have some fun, so here we go. First Class levers are like a teeter-totter or see-saw, a pair of scissors - which is two 1st class levers together, but I'll count as just one. There is also one in your elbow, one in your ankle, and another one in your jaw. That makes five. Second Class levers can be found in wheelbarrows, nutcrackers, your jaw and ankle, and vise grips; that's five again. Let's make it six with a canoe paddle, it's also a second class lever when you paddle with it in water. The last one is the easiest: Third Class levers can be found in lots more places, they are much more common. Here's a short, but diverse list: broom, fishing pole, hammer, your knee, pen, pencil, the joints in your fingers and toes not counting the first knuckle, a tennis racket, oh shucks just about every sporting device that you swing is a 3rd class lever when in use. The gas peddle in your car. Chopsticks, wooden spoons, fork, knife, spoon, toothbrush. And there are a whole lot more of all three.