Skeletal in a sentence as an adjective

From the demos shown on Channel 9, it seems the SDK comes with skeletal tracking.

The only issues I had were the prongs which provide the back skeletal strength broke through the mesh.

I really don't care about skeletal tracking etc.

Lifting weights is what stimulates skeletal muscle to grow.

My teeth vibrated, even my bones I couldn't believe I could feel my freaking skeletal bones vibrate.

The axons that conduct motor signals to the skeletal muscles have a conductance speed of 80-120m/s [1].

Turns out, your legs depend on regular contractions by the big skeletal muscles to pump blood back up toward your heart.

Kinect had a 100-500ms delay between something happening and skeletal tracking on the screen.

What really matters is the relationship between two tissue types, subcutaneous fat and skeletal muscle.

Insulin stimulates the uptake of valine, leucine, and isoleucine into skeletal muscle, but not uptake of tryptophan.

Kinect then builds a personal profile it will associate with that account based on facial recognition but also the camera's basic skeletal model of your body.

That might seem a flippant answer but they had much less constraints than most animals left living today:Air sacs not only allowed more efficient breathing but were also within skeletal structure, allowing for light weight strength.

Libfreenect is not a port of the MS Kinect SDK, it is a low level API that allows for access of the basic Kinect hardware functionality but doesn't support features that the MS Kinect SDK does, like skeletal tracking.

They had skeletal tracking, but it wasn't reliable enough for consumer applications:- OpenNI requires a calibration pose, while the technique Microsoft uses allows players to walk in and out of the frame.

The neanderthal breeding theory is not credible at all, because the strongest overlap between neanderthals and modern humans on a DNA basis comes from the far east, where there is no skeletal history of neanderthals existing.

And with my laptop I started pulling up skeletal diagrams of us and dogs, and showing that pretty much the entire logical structure of dogs' skeletons is identical to that of humans' skeletons, from shoulderblades to legs, if you think of them as standing on their tiptoes.

Skeletal definitions

adjective

of or relating to or forming or attached to a skeleton; "the skeletal system"; "skeletal bones"; "skeletal muscles"

adjective

very thin especially from disease or hunger or cold; "emaciated bony hands"; "a nightmare population of gaunt men and skeletal boys"; "eyes were haggard and cavernous"; "small pinched faces"; "kept life in his wasted frame only by grim concentration"

See also: bony cadaverous emaciated gaunt haggard pinched wasted