Don't touch it and go to the hospital.
hey people! easy answer- just press it really hardtowards your palm with you other hand. Then, CRACK! Instant relief. I want to just assure you that pushing your thumb down will be somewhat painful. :D
I love to crack my toes. I can do it a couple different ways so here they are. The first way is by simply pointing them upwards. Another way is to curl them down really hard then lifting them up slowly. Then you can also just crack them against something hard. Finally I like to curl my toes against my calf then just lift them slowly (I just do that if there's nothing hard around. Hope it works for you! It feels really good to!
Actually it is air being released into the joints.
The highest pitch that a human can hear is around 20,000 hertz.
The highest frequency that humans can hear is typically around 20,000 Hz.
hey people! easy answer- just press it really hardtowards your palm with you other hand. Then, CRACK! Instant relief. I want to just assure you that pushing your thumb down will be somewhat painful. :D
The sharp crack from thunder when it is close is due to the rapid expansion of air around the lightning bolt. The lightning bolt heats the air around it to an extremely high temperature causing it to expand rapidly, creating a shockwave that we hear as thunder. The closer the lightning strike, the louder the thunder crack.
pull in one arm of the opponent hear your chest or your side and which ever arm you have pulled that same side leg has to be bend and the ankle portion of the leg comes hear the neck of the opponent and then, hold the head and press his neck on the ankle... that is that...
Yes, crack is an Onomatopoeia. This is because an Onomatopoeia is when a word sounds like what it represents. In other words, you say it exactly how it is when you hear it.
Local cop station, then run from your mom because the crackhead could hurt you if you try and take her crack. "Hey mommy, can I have your crack?" "IT'S MY CRACK, YOU HEAR ME? *SLAP*"
Yes. It also sounds like a crack.
i think you have mistreated your child
The sound you hear when you crack your knuckles is actually the sound of carbon dioxide gas bubbles bursting.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knuckle_cracking
TV
The bones in your body don't actually crack when you move. The sound you hear is actually the sound of the gases in the synovial fluid escaping the sac around the joint.
No.
You will not hear it.