How to use in-sentence of “wrist”:
+ The bones in their arms are good for knuckle-walking: the radius can lock into one of the bones in the wrist so the two bones together can hold the animal’s weight.
+ The move can also be used in the same way but instead of an Irish whip, it is replace with either an arm wrench or wrist lock.
+ Drummer Robert Dylan Thomas broke his wrist just before the band were due to begin touring, and was replaced by drummer Elliott Andrews.
+ He recovered from wounds in his chest, wrist and thigh.
+ A wrist watch has the advantage of being portable in comparison to traditional watches.
+ Many different ways to position the wrist and hands are used.
+ On April 30, 2008, Timonen was hit by a wrist shot at his foot by Canadiens defenseman Andrei Markov.
+ Mirza was eliminated in the first round of the Tennis at the 2008 Summer Olympics2008 Beijing Olympics when she retired in her match against Iveta Benešová because of a right wrist injury.

Example sentences of “wrist”:
+ Kelly killed himself by cutting his wrist while taking a large amount of dextropropoxyphene at a woodswoodland area in Oxfordshire.
+ The hand has 27 bones including the wrist bones.
+ Kelly killed himself by cutting his wrist while taking a large amount of dextropropoxyphene at a woodswoodland area in Oxfordshire.
+ The hand has 27 bones including the wrist bones.
+ A pronating wrist snap similar to a forehand release pushes the disc forward, while spin is imparted “backwards” by rolling the disc off the index finger.
+ But he had a wrist injury.
+ The exchange of Friendship Day gifts like flowers, cards, and wrist bands is a popular tradition of this occasion.
+ Earlier, he was also the band’s drummer, until a wrist operation.
+ He wore a white waistcoat and enormous wrist bands, and he had a huge moustache and long, black hair.
+ Once to the wrist followed instantly by a second blow to the assailant’s head.
+ A famous spin bowler was the Australian Shane Warne, but his type was the leg break, which uses the wrist to spin the ball from the bowler’s right to left.
+ The primitive wrist of “Homo floresiensis” and its implications for hominin evolution.
