A total of six muscle move each eyeball, 4 rectus muscels and 2 obliques. The superior, inferior, lateral and medial rectal muscle all pull the eye to be looking more in ther own direction. The superior oblique pulls the eye to look down and laterally and the inferior oblique pull the eye to look um and medialy.
Superior Rectus allows you to look Up & In, whiel the Superior Oblique allows you to look Up & Out.
Inversion of the foot turns the sole of the foot laterally, meaning the sole of the foot is facing outward. This movement involves the foot rolling towards the outer side.
The inferior oblique muscle, which is located in the anterior portion beneath the eye (hence the inferior in the name). Its full Latin name is obliquus oculi inferior.
The Trochlea Nerve (cranial nerve 4) controls the superior oblique muscle of the eye. It turns the eye laterally and downwards.
An eyeball is a ball in your eye
Eyeball
Inferior Oblique Human & Physiology Lab Manual, Cat Edition 10th Edition p365
No, an infant's eyeball is about 65 to 75% the size of a grown person's eyeball. They do get bigger, mostly before puberty.
The sartorius flexes, abducts and laterally rotates the hip, and flexes and laterally rotates the knee The posterior fibers of the gluteus medius, laterally rotates the hip, while the whole glut medius works to abduct the hip
Eyeball is a compound word.
when we are at farsight the eyeball is stretched.