Your question seems to be incomplete. Can you please provide more details or clarify what you are asking?
"Lauren Limb" is a term used to describe the extra appendage that can grow from the side of a male anglerfish. It is named after Lauren Sallan, a biologist who studies fish evolution and was the first to describe this unique feature.
The most proximal part of the upper limb is the shoulder, specifically the shoulder girdle, which connects the upper limb to the trunk. This includes structures such as the clavicle (collarbone) and scapula (shoulder blade). The shoulder joint itself, where the humerus meets the scapula, is also considered a proximal feature of the upper limb.
V. Ramachandran desribes a bit of this in his book "The Emerging Mind". The Penfield-Homunculus is not an exact replica of the body, because the face is located directly besides the hand. Therefore, when a person is missing one arm, the neurons can cross-link, that is when they don't receive any input they form connections with the nearest area - in this case the face. This is why people with phantom limbs sometimes feel their missing hand when their face is touched, another example is that when the face is stimulated with ice cubes, they feel as if the phantom limb got cold.
The face of the cliff has a distinctive physical feature.
The lower limb attaches at the hip region, where the femur (thigh bone) articulates with the pelvic bone to form the hip joint.
supinator
"Lauren Limb" is a term used to describe the extra appendage that can grow from the side of a male anglerfish. It is named after Lauren Sallan, a biologist who studies fish evolution and was the first to describe this unique feature.
The most proximal part of the upper limb is the shoulder, specifically the shoulder girdle, which connects the upper limb to the trunk. This includes structures such as the clavicle (collarbone) and scapula (shoulder blade). The shoulder joint itself, where the humerus meets the scapula, is also considered a proximal feature of the upper limb.
V. Ramachandran desribes a bit of this in his book "The Emerging Mind". The Penfield-Homunculus is not an exact replica of the body, because the face is located directly besides the hand. Therefore, when a person is missing one arm, the neurons can cross-link, that is when they don't receive any input they form connections with the nearest area - in this case the face. This is why people with phantom limbs sometimes feel their missing hand when their face is touched, another example is that when the face is stimulated with ice cubes, they feel as if the phantom limb got cold.
The face of the cliff has a distinctive physical feature.
A range is a type of cooking stove. A feature is an aspect of a face.
In identifying humans, it can mean a large nose, a vivid scar, crossed eyes, a tattoo, a missing limb - any number of things which draw first attention when observing someone.
horns & noses.
The lower limb attaches at the hip region, where the femur (thigh bone) articulates with the pelvic bone to form the hip joint.
When you face the flashlight towards you, you get the full intensity of the light while when you face it away from you you get some light but not all.
Sometimes when someone breaks a limb, it will not be in a proper form (deformed).
Perhaps the expression you want is "limb from limb" and not "from limb to limb."