The jaw.
jawbone
It's the jaw bone, also known as the mandible. The auditory ossicles (ear bones), although moving, are not freely moving. We cannot control the movement of these bones, as they are controlled by the sound waves that are traveling through the ears.
When you're born your skull consists of 44 bones altogether. As you grow some of these bones fuse together. As an adult human there are 20 bones in the skull.
Just one. It's wedged between many bones in the skull in the center and spans the entire width, so in a diagram it may look as though there are two, one each making up part of the lateral aspect and the eye sockets, but it is really the two "wings" of the same bone.
i think about 100 bonesin everyones skull there is only one bone...the skull...it is all connected and has no ligaments holdin it together therefore making it one big bone
Yes, there are two parietal bones in your skull, one on the right and one on the left. They are joined to the frontal bone by the coronal suture, to the temporal bones by the squamous suture and to the occipital bone by the lambdoid suture.
The second longest human bone is the tracardis fratellis.
The sphenoid bone is superior to the temporal bone in the skull.
Cartilaginous are slightly movable, but the most prominent type of movable joints are synovial joints, such as the knee and shoulder, which are very movable.
vertebral column
The only movable joint in the head is the temporomandibular joint (TMJ), which connects the jawbone to the skull. This joint allows for movements necessary for chewing, talking, and facial expressions.
Cranium is your skull. The human body has only one skull.