any sport that you need to turn your head for it so i think all of them =L
You use the pivot joint in various sports such as tennis, basketball, and golf. This joint allows for rotational movement of the bones, facilitating actions like swinging a racket, dribbling a ball, or rotating the torso during a golf swing.
A pivot joint in use can be illustrated by the movement of the neck. The neck contains several vertebrae that are connected by pivot joints, which allow the neck to rotate and move in different directions. For example, when you turn your head to the left or right, the pivot joints in your neck allow your head to rotate on your shoulders. This is an example of a pivot joint in use.
A pivot is a "turning". If you forgot you keys and turn right back, you probably pivoted on your foot. There is a pivot joint between the first (C1) and second (C2) joint in the vertebra column (in the top of the neck). You use this to look to the right and left or to shake your head "no". Another is in your wrist, when you turn your hand up to accept a coin, you use a pivot joint.
Basketball
bowling
The Cervical (neck) vertebrae.
Your leg.. NOT Your arm...NOT Your Ear...Not Only joking easy
*pivot joint-As the name suggests, this kind of joint permits pivotal movement of the parts of body this joined. Movement of the skull is an example. A man can turn his head from one side to the other by rotating the skull, which is joined to the backbone at its top in such a way that a pivotal movements is possible *hinge joint-This allows the movement of the part of body in one direction up or down but not sideways. Example of this joint is: knee-joint, elbow-joint, and movement of the lower jaw. *ball and socket joint-When a part is capable of making an all round movement up and down and sideways- this is possible by a joint of this kind. The leg can be moved in any direction, sideways, up and down *swivel joint- turn like a wheel on an axle. it is found between the vertebrae and the spine.
Yes.
see what gets hit most.. either trial and error or ask someone who plays.. what sport?
Peter Bone abandoned Pivot 3. AND NO
The Trochoidal joints permit rotational movement around a long axis as with the rotation of the radius at the radioulnar joint. i.e. ( the neck)