yes because when you smile your ears move
there are 32 teeth in the average human body mouth.The upper jaw, that is part of the skullThe lower jaw, connected with the upper jaw and with ability to move up-down and from side to side
Maleus; an ossicle in the middle ear (also called hammer)
Eye, ear, toe, lip, leg, arm, jaw, rib, hip, gum, gut, jaw.
The main muscle in your jaw is called the masseter muscle. It is responsible for closing the jaw during chewing and is one of the strongest muscles in the human body.
The Mandible is your jaw, so it is associated with the Skeletal System, and the Digestive system.
Depending on what you're eating, It may not be the ear at all, it might be the jaw. There is a bone that runs from the middle of the ear to the jaw and even though you don't feel anything around your jaw, it may be the reason your ear hurts. It might help if you had a doctor check it out though.
there are 32 teeth in the average human body mouth.The upper jaw, that is part of the skullThe lower jaw, connected with the upper jaw and with ability to move up-down and from side to side
hard lump between jaw and ear what is it and how can it be cured?
because its jaw can unhinge and its jaw is not rigidly connected and it is Meryl connected by ligaments
Maleus; an ossicle in the middle ear (also called hammer)
Yes if its causing enough pain that moving your jaw is uncomfortable
The human tongue is connected to the floor of the mouth by the frenulum. Furthermore it is attached to the hyoid bone, (a bone in the human neck) mandible (jawbone) and the temporal styloid process (bone that is placed below the ear). sometimes its connected to the uvula. The tongue is connected to both the jawbone and the skull by four sets of muscles - The genio-glossus to the lower jaw The hyo-glossus to the hyoid bone in the throat The stylo-glossus to the base of the skull The palato-glossus to the rear of the palate.
You can't speak properly because you are inhaling and then exhaling one right after another while your brain is forcing your jaw to drop. You can't hear correctly during a yawn because your brain is making your jaw drop as said before to equalize pressure in the middle ear. While this is happening there is a mild vacuum and pressure in the middle ear, as if you were in an airplane about to land.
Because your upper jaw is part of your skull which is connected to your spine and your lower jaw is connected to your upper jaw by a hinge type joint that allows you to move your lower jaw so that we can eat. So therefore we cannot move our upper jaw because that would require moving our head which would move our lower jaw too.
The human jaw consists of two parts, one fixed and one movable. The fixed jaw is the maxilla (upper jaw) and the movable lower jaw is the mandible.
the bone connected to your chin
The three general sections of the ear are the outer (focusing), middle (converting) and inner ear (translating vibrations into nerve impulses).The Outer EarThis consists of the Pinna - the external bit you see, and the ear canal which terminates at the Ear Drum, a thin membrane. Also called the tympanic membrane.The Middle earThe middle ear contains three small bones, the smallest in the human body, Hammer (Malleus); Anvil (Incus); and the Stirrup (Stapedius).The Hammer and the incus are connected together in such a way that the efficiency of the sound transmission path may be varied depending on their relative position. You can hear over a range of about 120dB (decibels) and this is a range of 1012 to 1. *In addition as an accessory, here are located your balance organs.The middle ear connects to your mouth via theEustachian Tube, and this is responsible for balancing the air pressure across the Ear Drum. This is the one that causes trouble sometimes when in an airplane, or when you have a cold.The Inner EarThe inner ear is connected by the tiny Oval window to the Stirrup. The inner ear is called the Cochlea, as it resembles a snail shell curled up and is fluid filled. If it were straightened, it would be found to have a dividing membrane down the length of it, and on one side of it are thousands of hair cells, each group of which respond to sounds of different frequencies. Connecting to this fluid filled volume is also the round window, which helps balance out the pressure.The tiny hair cells are connected to the auditory nerve which goes to the brain, and when the hair cell is moved, its base creates an electrical signal which our brain interprets as sound, each of several thousand frequencies with its own amplitude.By comparison, if humans were able to judge weight over a similar range, they could distinguish any weight from one milligram right up to 1000 tonnes!One of the distinguishing characteristics of mammals is three middle ear bones, and one movable jaw bone. Reptiles have a two-part jaw bone, and only two middle ear bones.