| 释义 | 
		Definition of inner ear in English: inner earnoun The semicircular canals and cochlea, which form the organs of balance and hearing and are embedded in the temporal bone. 内耳 Example sentencesExamples -  Many cases of early deafness can be helped by a device implanted in the inner ear, the cochlea.
 -  The cochlea is the organ of hearing of the mammalian inner ear, transducing sound into an electrical signal.
 -  Most of these have to do with problems of the inner ear or of the brain stem or cerebellum.
 -  Microscopic crystals of aragonite located in the inner ears of zebrafish control balance and hearing.
 -  Keeping your sense of balance depends on your brain processing a variety of information from your eyes, your nervous system and your inner ears.
 -  In the remaining time before hatching, eyes develop from the optic vesicles, and the inner ear develops from the otic vesicles.
 -  The pathology usually lies in the posterior semicircular canal of the inner ear.
 -  These bones vibrate in succession and move the lower membrane of the organ of corti located in the cochlea of the inner ear.
 -  The thing is that the nerve connecting the inner ear and the hearing center in the brain usually has only one thread.
 -  Hearing takes place at the level of the inner ear hair cells - the basic sensory elements of hearing.
 -  The unique semicircular canals of the inner ear continuously inform the brain of the head and body's position.
 -  The stirrup bone exerts pressure at the oval window of the inner ear, further increasing the sound energy up to fifteen times.
 -  The sound, from a radio or a mobile phone, is then carried through the jaw bone to the inner ear by bone resonance which converts the digital signals to audio.
 -  It contains three tiny bones that move when sounds reach them, transmitting the sound waves through the middle ear to the inner ear.
 -  In older people, the most common cause is degeneration in the semi-circular canals of the inner ear.
 -  In the cochlea in the inner ear, the vibrations are changed into electric signals that move along the nerves to the brain.
 -  In the middle ear are three tiny lever-like bones that carry sound vibrations from the eardrum to the inner ear.
 -  Very rarely, tumours affecting the nerve that supplies the inner ear may cause dizziness.
 -  Changes in the inner ear or in the nerves attached to it, earwax buildup and various diseases can all impact your hearing.
 -  Cochlear implants are devices that are surgically placed in the inner ear.
 
    Definition of inner ear in US English: inner earnounˈɪnər ɪ(ə)rˈinər i(ə)r The semicircular canals and cochlea, which form the organs of balance and hearing and are embedded in the temporal bone. 内耳 Example sentencesExamples -  It contains three tiny bones that move when sounds reach them, transmitting the sound waves through the middle ear to the inner ear.
 -  Changes in the inner ear or in the nerves attached to it, earwax buildup and various diseases can all impact your hearing.
 -  Microscopic crystals of aragonite located in the inner ears of zebrafish control balance and hearing.
 -  These bones vibrate in succession and move the lower membrane of the organ of corti located in the cochlea of the inner ear.
 -  The sound, from a radio or a mobile phone, is then carried through the jaw bone to the inner ear by bone resonance which converts the digital signals to audio.
 -  Cochlear implants are devices that are surgically placed in the inner ear.
 -  In the remaining time before hatching, eyes develop from the optic vesicles, and the inner ear develops from the otic vesicles.
 -  The cochlea is the organ of hearing of the mammalian inner ear, transducing sound into an electrical signal.
 -  In older people, the most common cause is degeneration in the semi-circular canals of the inner ear.
 -  Most of these have to do with problems of the inner ear or of the brain stem or cerebellum.
 -  Many cases of early deafness can be helped by a device implanted in the inner ear, the cochlea.
 -  The pathology usually lies in the posterior semicircular canal of the inner ear.
 -  The stirrup bone exerts pressure at the oval window of the inner ear, further increasing the sound energy up to fifteen times.
 -  The unique semicircular canals of the inner ear continuously inform the brain of the head and body's position.
 -  Hearing takes place at the level of the inner ear hair cells - the basic sensory elements of hearing.
 -  The thing is that the nerve connecting the inner ear and the hearing center in the brain usually has only one thread.
 -  Very rarely, tumours affecting the nerve that supplies the inner ear may cause dizziness.
 -  In the middle ear are three tiny lever-like bones that carry sound vibrations from the eardrum to the inner ear.
 -  Keeping your sense of balance depends on your brain processing a variety of information from your eyes, your nervous system and your inner ears.
 -  In the cochlea in the inner ear, the vibrations are changed into electric signals that move along the nerves to the brain.
 
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