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Elbow
Besides scrapes and bruises people can loose eyes, teeth, and get broken noses and face bones. Overall throwing rocks at sombody is not a good idea.
wild waves, brownieville and chicken throwing
muscular system.
The dangerous elements of Cheerleading are Stunting (lifting or throwing a girl in the air) and Tumbling (gymnastics). The risk is less if you use mats and trained coaches
Simon says "He's always throwing a faint" in "Lord of the Flies," referring to Piggy's tendency to faint when faced with conflict or stress. Simon observes this behavior when discussing Piggy's lack of physical ability and contribution to the group.
the muscles could not work without the bones and vice versa. The bones are the structure of your body and the muscles help you move your bones.
Not entirely. In any of the throwing events, your form, speed, and technique play huge roles in your distance. You can have the biggest arms in your school, but if you can't pick up enough speed and your form is all wrong, you won't get too far. You might be able to reach 80 feet with just your muscles, but people with good technique and speed reach over 100 feet, and they can be the smallest, skinniest one on the team. So, no. Discus (along with the other throwing events) is not a muscular power event.
First of all, a basketball could be thrown far if the person throwing it was strong, while if a weak person throws it, it won't go as far. So as you can see, it depends on how muscular the person is.
You'll need muscular strength is weight lifting, football, wrestling, boxing, shot-put, discus, and cross country. Pretty much every sport requires muscular strength, but these are a few requiring more than others. Hope I helped!
it means that they both were throwing fits and throwing up it means that they both were throwing fits and throwing up it means that they both were throwing fits and throwing up it means that they both were throwing fits and throwing up
This depends upon what it is that you are throwing. Throwing a javelin is not like throwing a fit, or throwing a fight. Let's say you are throwing a javelin. Your throwing could be accurate, powerful, and (since a javelin is a weapon) perhaps deadly. But all of that depends upon context.
Throwing a stone from a moving train involves the same type of calculations as throwing a stone from a stationary platform. The difference is that you now consider the added horizontal velocity imparted by the moving train. If you throw forward, the train's velocity is added to your contribution to the stone. If you throw backward, the train's velocity is subtracted from your contribution to the stone. If you throw sideways, the train's velocity does not alter your contribution to the stone. Whether any of this matters or not depends on friction due to the different air velocities encountered by the stone. Vertical velocity is relatively unchanged by the train's contribution. The stone will still go up (if you include an upward vector in your throw) and it will still go down. The end result is that the stone will hit the ground at some point. That point will be relatively the same in both cases, except for the minor difference due to air velocity.
Throwing a pointed weapon.
Yes. Since triceratops has three sharp, strong horns connected to its thick frill, triceratops can take down king kong. The muscular body with a heavy weight would prevent king kong from picking it up and throwing it.