Almost all of your joints are used in tennis, but the main ones in a tennis serve are the knee joints, and elbow joints.
A mixture of old rope and tar used to pack joints on wooden ships is called "oakum." It is used to make the joints watertight and secure on the ship's hull.
The joint in your neck is a combination of various types of joints, including ball-and-socket joints in the cervical spine and plane joints between the vertebrae. These joints allow for the range of motion and flexibility needed in the neck.
The dorsal rami serve the skin and musculature of the posterior body trunk.
The subclasses of synovial joints are plane joints, hinge joints, pivot joints, condyloid joints, saddle joints, and ball-and-socket joints. These subclasses vary in the types of movement they allow and the shapes of the articulating surfaces of the bones involved.
No, skull joints are not called cartilaginous joints. Skull joints are typically classified as fibrous joints, specifically sutures, because they are connected by dense fibrous connective tissue. Cartilaginous joints are joints where the bones are held together by cartilage, like the joints between vertebrae in the spine or the pubic symphysis.
You can hit an underhand serve in tennis; however, the overhand serve is more effective because it is more powerful. That is why you don't see the underhand serve used much.
Sports where you serve a ball include tennis, volleyball, badminton, table tennis, and pickleball. In tennis, the serve starts each point, while in volleyball, the serve initiates play and is crucial for scoring. Badminton and table tennis also require a serve to start each rally, and in pickleball, the serve is used to begin each point as well.
In a game of tennis, you serve from behind the baseline on the right side of the court.
All of them. Pretty much any sport out side of chess uses your whole body
Badly.
a serve
In tennis, you serve the ball from behind the baseline into the diagonally opposite service box on the other side of the net.
A tennis ball!
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A tennis ball.
Yes
a serve