A stirrup is on a saddle that you put your foot in when you mount, and when you ride.
Another word for stirrup is the stapes.
The bone in your middle ear called the stirrup has that name because it resembles the stirrup used when riding a horse.
The stirrup bone is named such because of the way it looks very similar to the stirrup used in horseback riding.
The stapes or stirrup is the stirrup-shaped small bone or ossicle in the middle ear
The answer is 'étrier' from the French for stirrup
A peacock stirrup is a safety stirrup
The plural form of stirrup is stirrups.
Frank Stirrup was born in 1931.
A peacock stirrup is like a normal stirrup but it has a ruuber band on the outside of the stirrup, so that in case of emergency, the ruuber band will pop off and your foot will come out of the stirrup.
For Howrse's 5th riding level it is a safety stirrup.
a stirrup made of iron, used in English riding.
When we use a single stirrup to tide a beam or column at a time, we say it is two leg stirrup and thus if we use Double stirrup to tide a beam or column at a time, we say it is four leg stirrups. A single stirrup have two leg. _(Er. Aabid Iqbal)