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Answer for the clue "Especially one in the middle ear ", 7 letters:
ossicle

Alternative clues for the word ossicle

Word definitions for ossicle in dictionaries

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. a small bone; especially one in the middle ear [syn: bonelet , ossiculum ]

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Ossicle \Os"si*cle\, n. [L. ossiculum, dim. of os, ossis, a bone.] A little bone; as, the auditory ossicles in the tympanum of the ear. (Zo["o]l.) One of numerous small calcareous structures forming the skeleton of certain echinoderms, as the starfishes.

Usage examples of ossicle.

If the tiny muscles attached to them are damaged, or if the nerves leading to those muscles are, the ossicle movements become somewhat erratic.

There never had been any discernible damage to the auditory nerves, no apparent disorder to the ossicle, cochlea, or eardrum of either ear.

The outermost of the three ossicles is attached to the tympanum and moves with it.

The whole structure from the tympanum to this small opening, including the tympanic cavity and the ossicles, is called the middle ear.

The function of the ossicles is more than that of transmitting the vibration pattern of the tympanum.

Sound waves are conducted through the bones of the skull, but the ossicles do not respond to these with nearly the sensitivity with which they respond to tympanic movements, and this is also most helpful.

For in the ear the sound-waves are first of all taken over by the so-called ossicles, three small bones in the middle ear which, when examined with the Goethean eye, appear to be a complete metamorphosis of ah arm or a leg.

The vibrations of the sound waves passed to her radius and ulna, her humerus, her collar bone, sternum, ribs, vertebrae, and skull, finally reaching the ossicles of her middle ear.

The jackhammers of the Wing of Zock had been wiggling my ossicles for twelve hours.

She slipped a needle into the flaking silver-green, measured and clattered her ossicles in frustration.

For in the ear the sound-waves are first of all taken over by the so-called ossicles, three small bones in the middle ear which, when examined with the Goethean eye, appear to be a complete metamorphosis of ah arm or a leg.

In addition, the lever action of the ossicles is such that sound-wave energy is concentrated.