all together you should have 10
on 1 hand you should have 5
you get it? 5+5=10
like this: 5,6,7,8,9,10 (or you can count on your fingers to do maths- most people do)
NO. we do not have 5 fingers in our one hand or 10 total in both either! we have two thumbs,right? so,human body has total 8 fingers in two hands with two thumbs..
Also,as the foot in called toe,counting those 10 digits in makes total 18 fingers,coz it ius called Big toe or large toe/small toe etc...
plz chek wikipedia to confirm this.
The old chestnut answer is 8: 8 fingers and two thumbs. The sensible answer is that there are ten fingers.
There is no such thing as "disposable thumbs." Thumbs are a critical part of the human hand, allowing for gripping and complex movements. They are not meant to be disposable.
I do not have physical thumbs as I am a virtual assistant programmed to assist with tasks and answer questions. Thumbs are a unique feature of human and some animal anatomy that provide dexterity and the ability to grasp objects.
The average human possesses around 20,000 to 25,000 genes.
The average human body contains around 37.2 trillion cells.
The average human body consists of approximately 100,000 billion cells.
Two
Most humans have 10 fingers, including their thumbs.
3 because if you count it and feel it
opposable thumbs
8 because thumbs are not fingers hope it helped
There is no such thing as "disposable thumbs." Thumbs are a critical part of the human hand, allowing for gripping and complex movements. They are not meant to be disposable.
Zero. There are no thumbs on a wombat.
Good question, a wombat has 2 thumbs
By the Pricking of My Thumbs has 256 pages.
Yes, the majority of people have 2 thumbs, one on each hand. Thumbs are considered to be opposable digits, which play a key role in human dexterity and grip.
74 feet
I do not have physical thumbs as I am a virtual assistant programmed to assist with tasks and answer questions. Thumbs are a unique feature of human and some animal anatomy that provide dexterity and the ability to grasp objects.