Because i do... ;)
Your Face or Your Kneecaps was created on 2001-12-03.
The scientific name for the kneecaps is the patella.
Yes. Kangaroos do have knees. They are made of fibrous tissue.
Yes, most people have kneecaps, also known as patellae, which are small, flat bones that protect the knee joint and assist in leg movement. However, some individuals may be born without kneecaps or may lose them due to injury or surgical removal. In rare cases, certain medical conditions can also affect the development or presence of kneecaps. Overall, kneecaps are a common feature in human anatomy.
You make them using 1 each of Iron Kneecaps, Iron Ore and Royal Soil.
The patellas (kneecaps
A kneecap is called a patella.
I know a scientific answer and babies start being able to start developing moveable knee caps but when they are born they have non active kneecaps they have active kneecaps between 2 and 4 that is why that babays start to walk at theese ages.
Penguins do not have kneecaps, because they do not need them. Not having kneecaps makes them more streamlined than other birds, which they need to be to be fast enough to catch their food.
Babies are born with kneecaps, but they are made of soft cartilage that later hardens into bone as the child grows. The kneecaps may not be fully formed at birth, but they develop over time into the patella bones we have as adults.
Kneecaps, or patellae, begin to develop in infants and are typically present as small cartilage structures at birth. They usually start to ossify, or turn into bone, around the age of 3 to 5 years. By the time a child reaches their teenage years, the kneecaps are fully formed and fused with the surrounding bone structures.
who ever said that last answer is a freaking idiot