The latin name for the finger bones.
This muscle in your shoulder lifts your arm.
This is the hole in front of the lens of the eye.
Pupil
This flying predator is a bird that hunts at night and can move its head 270 degrees in each direction.
This hard bone protects your brain.
Skull or cranium
The bone in your upper arm.
Humerus
These muscles move your fingers.
Forearm muscles
The ring of colored muscle that controls the pupil's size.
Iris
This sea animal is a hunter that digs in the sand and is named for the strange shape of its head and the weird placement of its eyes. Hint: It can still see while it digs its head in the sea floor.
Hammerhead Shark
This group of bones protects the bundle of nerves that comes from your brain to the rest of your body.
Spine
The long stick-like bones in your foot.
Metatarsals
The muscle that bends your knee.
Hamstring Muscle
The white part of the eye.
Sclera
This group of animals has eyes adapted to see from very far away in the air because of how they get around and hunt, and often they can't move their eyes in their head.
Birds
This group of bones protects the vital organs in the torso.
Ribs
The two bones in your lower leg. (Pronounced correctly)
Tibia and Fibula
The muscle that points the foot.
Calf muscle
The nerve that takes the image to the brain.
Optic Nerve
This is the rhyme that helps us remember how animal eye placement usually works.
Eyes in front likes to hunt, eyes on the side likes to hide.
The quadriceps muscle is responsible for doing this.
Unbending or unfolding the knee.
The hip bone.
Pelvis
The muscle that unbends the elbow.
Triceps
The skin sheet on the back of the eye that detects the image.
Retina
This kind of animal uses its eyes to push food down its own throat.
Frog
This sense does not work in a room with no air in it.
Sense of sound or hearing