It is the uvula. I'm not sure it is really muscular though. Or what purpose it serves either.
The archway in the back of the throat is called the uvula. It is a fleshy, cone-shaped structure that hangs down from the soft palate. The uvula plays a role in speech and swallowing.
it's a uvula
The medical term for a soft v-shaped mass that hangs from the roof of the back of the mouth is "uvula."
The fleshy fingerlike projection of the soft palate is called the uvula. It hangs down at the back of the throat and plays a role in speaking and swallowing.
The appendix hangs off the end of the cecum.
The uvula- it is a finger like process that hangs down from the center of the soft palate posteriorly.
The archway in the back of the throat is called the uvula. It is a fleshy, cone-shaped structure that hangs down from the soft palate. The uvula plays a role in speech and swallowing.
it's called your uvula. it's basically a flap of skin that hangs down from the back of the soft palate (the hard palate is the roof of your mouth)
it's a uvula
The uvula
The medical term for a soft v-shaped mass that hangs from the roof of the back of the mouth is "uvula."
I think you might mean 'uvula', which is a part of the oropharynx (in the back of the mouth) that hangs down from the roof of the mouth(soft palate). It's important in the articulation of sounds.
The uvula is in the back of the mouth. It is also called the "palatine uvula" and is part of the soft palate. Stimulation of the uvula results in triggering the gag reflex, in order to prevent choking.
If she is someones girlfriend and not the lesbian's then she might not be a lesbian. She could merely be friends with this girl. If she is the lesbian's girlfriend then yes she probably is then. :)
The fleshy fingerlike projection of the soft palate is called the uvula. It hangs down at the back of the throat and plays a role in speaking and swallowing.
The appendix hangs off the end of the cecum.
That would be the little grape that hangs down at the back of your soft palate, the uvula. The word comes from uva, "grape", plus the feminine dimunutive suffix -ula.