Force per unit area describes this term.
What is stress?
The cells are responsible for laying down new bone material.
What are osteoblasts?
This phase is where the majority of gait occurs during walking.
What is stance phase?
This word describes velocity when acceleration is zero.
What is constant?
A twist represents rotation about this axis.
What is longitudinal?
This is what happens if a material is streteched/flexed beyond its plastic region.
What is fracture/break?
The relative direction that intervertebral discs move during trunk flexion.
What is posteriorly?
These terms describe the three regions of the foot.
What are rearfoot, midfoot, and forefoot?
An example of a scalar quantity that describes the magnitude of velocity.
What is speed?
Contrary to popular belief, most prominent early Protestants (Luther, Calvin, Zwingli, etc) believed in the real presence in the Eucharist and special devotion to this non-Jesus biblical figure.
Who is Mary?
This parameter (variable) is characterized by having both a magnitude and direction.
What is a vector?
These joints make up intervertebral discs and are composed of hyaline or fibrocartilage and allow limited movement.
What are cartilaginous?
This type of rotation describes the hip during walking, running, and sprinting.
What is internal?
This simple equation describes the potential energy of an object provided by gravity.
What is PE = mgh?
The two primary regulators of glycemic control are released by alpha and beta cells on this organ.
What is the pancreas?
This term describes the angle formed between two body segments.
What is a relative angle?
This joint position is characterized by having maximum compression and maximum contact between surfaces.
What is close-packed?
This type of walking/running is characterized by the foot landing outside/beyond the center of mass.
What is overstriding?
The term to describe an ankle with a negative angular velocity.
What is plantarflexing?
These cells surround muscles and proliferate in response to training as a part of the hypertrophy adaptiation.
What are satellite cells?
This term refers to a body part that is on the same side of the body as another part.
What is ipsilateral?
This type of material demonstrates a nonlinear relationship between stress and strain.
What is viscoelastic?
This is the most common site of a bilateral fatigue fracture called spondylolisthesis.
What is L5, S1?
A wheel rolling on a frictionless surface has this instantaneous velocity at the point of contact.
What is 0 m/s?
This 1st (possibly 2nd) century book, written in Koine Greek, was not included in the Bible, but it is the earliest form of a Catechism (describes early Church teaching and practice) that exists.
What is the Didache?