Intervertebral
Almost all the joints between vertebrae are movable. The joints between the cervical vertebrae and lumber vertebrae have fairly good movement. Between thoracic vertebrae only you have less movement. But then they do move on each other.
between the vertebrae
At the thoracic vertebrae, joints include the intervertebral joints between the individual vertebrae, the costovertebral joints where the ribs articulate with the vertebrae, and the costotransverse joints where the ribs articulate with the transverse processes of the thoracic vertebrae.
animals who are Vertebrates have a vertebrae which is a backbone/spine
Cervical is pertaining to any part of the neck.
Intra- means between, vertebr- means vertebrae and -al means pertaining to. All together it means pertaining to between the vertebrae. Most likely it refers to a pad or disc or space that is found between the backbones.
The cervical vertebrae are the spinal bones of the neck.
Costovertebral is the medical term meaning pertaining to the ribs and vertebrae.
Of or pertaining to the neck; as, the cervical vertebrae.
SacralThe sacrum is triangular shaped and its located between the lumbar vertebrae and coccyx. The vertebrae in the sacrum is fused together and it consists of 5 sacral vertebrae S1-S5.The medical term sacral means pertaining to the sacrum, from sacr meaning 'sacrum' (the five fused bones in the lower back) and the suffix -al meaning 'pertaining to.'
The word disk, as it applies to the back, refers to elastic tissue that sits between the vertebrae. These disks absorb shock during movement.
Lumbar
The medical term for pertaining to between the teeth is interdental.
The facet joints are the joints between adjacent vertebrae.
Interdental is the medical term meaning pertaining to between the teeth.
Its primary purpose is to act as a shock absorber between adjacent vertebrae. Spinal discs also act as ligaments that hold the vertebrae of the spine together
There are lots, but "spinal" is a pretty good starting place. "Lumbar", "thoracic", and "cervical" are terms that (might) relate to particular portions of the backbone (roughly speaking the lower back, upper back, and neck respectively). Vertebral means pertaining to one of the bones that comprise the spine.