If you're referring to the scientific/medical name for cleft lip and palate, they are:Cheiloschisis for cleft lipPalatoschisis for cleft palate
The skin that is attached to the tongue and lower palate is called the lingual frenulum.
What six processes would be a good comeback question. Name the processes and one of us will have a stab at it.
A complicate question. The hardest metals are certain alloys treated by certain hardening processes, which differ widely. Tungsten carbide is one of the hardest alloys known; any alloy that passes a spec known as Rockwell C-60, is extremely hard, and there is also Case hardening, and other nitriding processes, to name just a few.
The name of the phase change that occurs when a substance transitions from a solid to a liquid is called melting. Conversely, when a substance changes from a liquid to a solid, the phase change is known as freezing. Each of these processes involves the absorption or release of energy, typically in the form of heat.
It's palatine process of the bone maxilla. It forms the most of the palate. Posterior to it lies the bone called as palatine bone.
If you're referring to the scientific/medical name for cleft lip and palate, they are:Cheiloschisis for cleft lipPalatoschisis for cleft palate
uvula
Monet's Palate
The hanging pear-shaped projection of tissue at the border of the soft palate is called the uvula.
When a person is developing in the uterus, the palate (roof of the mouth) doesn't fuse together as it should. The lip is often not fused either. The surgery to fix this is not complex. See the link below for images:
Chert, a form of quartz, can form as beds or nodules in limestone or dolostone.
The original form of the name Jasmine is Yasmine - said aloud as Yasa-meen (hard to show through writing) The name's origin is Persian.
The skin that is attached to the tongue and lower palate is called the lingual frenulum.
The bone beneath the tongue is called the hyoid bone. It is a U-shaped bone located in the neck that is not directly connected to any other bone in the body, but is held in place by muscles and ligaments.
Monet's Palate
monets palate