The medical term is Palate. It can be the Hard palate the bony part in front, or the fleshy part called the Soft palate, which lies behind the hard palate.
In front of the palate in your mouth is the hard palate, which is the bony part of the roof of your mouth. It separates the mouth from the nasal cavity.
yes
A hard lump on the clavicle can be caused by a variety of conditions such as a bone spur, a cyst, a lipoma (fatty tissue growth), or bony growth. It is important to have it evaluated by a healthcare provider to determine the underlying cause and appropriate treatment.
This question doesn't really make sense... The clavicle is the collarbone. The sternum - usually people are referring to the manubrium when talking about the sternum - is the hard bone that looks like the body of a necktie protecting your heart in the front of the body. The ribs attach to the sternum in front, to the spine in back. The clavicle attaches to the sternum at the notch at the base of your neck. When you protract the shoulders (hunch them forward), the notch is more pronounced for ease of location. In fact, the sternoclavicular joint is the only skeletal attachment of the shoulder complex. So really, the clavicle doesn't join the sternum to anything. The clavicle is joined to the sternum, giving the shoulder girdle it's one attachment to the axial skeleton.
Hard palate.
hard palate
Reptile: Hard and scaly, with scutes or bony plates Amphibian: Soft, smooth, or warty, possibly moist skin
bony fish is caught and sold. when we buy it we ten to eat it. it will be hard for us people or even worse for old people to eat these bony fishes. What if they get choked?
It's Dentin
Well this could be a bony exostosis, a "bony growth" that can grow anywhere rapidly. It can be removed during a fairly standard operation and if not operated on, could cause serious pressure patches on your feet when you get older.
It could be a number of things. First if it is hard and bony and has been there for a long time it could be Tori, a bony growth that is not harmful or anything to be worried about (unless you have to get dentures at some point). If it is soft it can be anything from a cyst to a tissue growth. I would suggest having it checked by a dentist to make sure that it isn't anything to worry about.