what position is where the body is standing up straight, face forward, with the arms at the side and palms forward.
what is the anatomical position?
What lies between the chest and pelvic area?
What is the abdominal area?
What are the two small oval bones, varying in size and form in different individuals?
What are the nasal bones?
What is the small bone in your ankle?
what is the talus?
What is your body's central framework?
what is skeletal system?
what describes the location of one body part with respect to another?
What is the relative position?
This protects the brain.
what is the skull?
What is lying flat with the face downward?
what is prone?
What is the bone that forms your upper jaw?
what is the maxillae?
What are the 14 bones that are found in the fingers of each hand and also in the toes of each foot?
What are the phalanges?
when something is positioned above it is?
what is a superior postion?
What is the chemical reactions in the body's cells that change food into energy?
What is metabolism?
What is the thick, hard bone that forms part of the side and base of the skull?
what is the temporal bones?
What is the largest bone in the human skull that holds the lower teeth?
what is the mandible?
What is a group of cells that have a similar structure and that function together as a unit?
what is the tissue?
when something is positioned towards the back, what is it?
what is the posterior position?
What is the lower back region of your spinal column or backbone?
what is the lumbar?
What are the facial bones located in the medial wall of the orbit?
what is the lacrimal bone?
When the muscles are closer to the skin they are?
what is the superficial surface?
What is the blood vessel that carries blood to the heart from tissues and organs in the body?
what is the veins?
what postion is more towards the side?
What is the lateral position?
What is the process by which the body utilizes the energy released by catabolism to synthesize complex molecules?
What is the anabolism?
What are the long bones within the hand that is connected to the carpals?
What is the metacarpals?
What is one of the twenty-two bones that form the skull and essentially helps to connect the neurocranium to the facial skeleton?
What are the sphenoid bones?
what are the blood vessels that bring oxygen-rich blood from your heart to all of your body's cells?
what are the arteries?