A test question you're likely to see is where a professor takes anatomical terms and directional terms and puts them together, and you need to know both to be able to answer the question. So, we're going to practice those now. First up, we have: Name 2 regions that are distal to the antecubital region. I'll give you a second to see if you can name 2 regions like that. Alright.
Antecubital, that's the soft spot of your elbow or the front of your elbow there. And distal means further from the attachment point on a limb. So, really, distal to the antecubital region is going to be anywhere further down the arm in that region there. So there's a number of regions that work. You could talk about the antebrachial (your forearm), the carpal region (your wrist), manus (your hand), pollux (your thumb), or digital (your fingers). I'll pick my favorites—I'll go with carpal and digital. But any of those regions that I just mentioned would work. Alright.
The next one, you instruct