Sentences with phrase «hyoid bone»

The hyoid bone is a small, U-shaped bone in your neck that helps with swallowing and speaking. Full definition
But that changed with the discovery of a Neanderthal hyoid bone in 1989.
She her team found that howler monkeys face an anatomical trade - off: a species can either have a really big hyoid bone, or it can be very well endowed.
An analysis of a Neanderthal's fossilised hyoid bone - a horseshoe - shaped structure in the neck - suggests the species had the ability to speak.
He said that the current study brought more weight to the conclusions that Neanderthals had very similar hyoid bones to us, «not only in form but also in what concerns their mechanical properties».
Snow leopards have a soft hyoid bone and are sometimes classified under «big cats,» but they do not roar.
The baby may have difficulty: opening his mouth widely enough to latch deeply because the tight frenulum is pulling on the hyoid bone in the neck that supports the root of the tongue, which in turn pulls the jaw muscles.
Lucy could not speak the way we do, because she most likely had air sacs, balloon - shaped organs that attach to an extension of the hyoid bone, says Bart de Boer, an expert in the evolution of speech at Vrije University in Brussels.
«The vocal folds of a howler monkey are three times longer than a human's, yet they are ten times smaller than us, with a hyoid bone uniquely adapted to resonate sound and exaggerate their size,» said Dunn.
The hyoid bone is crucial for speaking as it supports the root of the tongue.
The larynx is suspended from the hyoid bone; the hyoid bone is anterior to vertabra C3 and the larynx occupies space in the throat anterior to vertebrae C4 — C6.
If your chin and hyoid bone are jutting forward or your head is tilting back, your entire core — internal structures such as your organs — will push forward into your abdominal wall.
The hyoid bone is the human version of the wishbone.
Draw your hyoid bone back so that the back of your neck lengthens.
Remember your hyoid bone.
In addition, it builds core strength, especially if you engage a funny little structure called the hyoid bone while you practice it.
If you know where your hyoid bone is — at the base of your throat, above the thyroid cartilage — draw your hyoid back into your throat.
The ability to roar was thought to have been made possible by a «soft» hyoid bone (the bones supporting the larynx).
The ligament that connects the hyoid bones in house cats is rigid.
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