the gliding joint
The wrist bone is a gliding joint.
None. Because the wrist is the joint of the arm and the hand.
The bones of the hand are the carpals (wrist bones), metacarpals (bones under the palm), and phalanges (finger bones). Part of the wrist would include the radius if you consider the wrist part of the hand. The carpals, by name, are the trapezoid, scaphoid, lunate, triquetrum, pisiform, capitate, trapezium, and hamate. The three distinct phalanges are the proximal, middle, and distal phalanges.PhalangesCarpalMetacarpalsare the bones in your hands
correct!
Injury to a joint
Gliding joints are found between the radius and the scaphoid.
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gliding joints
There is elbow joint at proximal end and wrist joint at the distal end. Both are synovial type of joints.
your wrist is an ellipsoid joint
your wrist makes a gliding joint.
sound like something found in a wrist.
None. Because the wrist is the joint of the arm and the hand.
No, the Ball and socket joint is in the hand and wrist. An example of a hinge joint is the knee.
gliding joint
I don't know! Ask someone else!!!!!!! GAWD! The wrist is a gliding joint.
None. Because the wrist is the joint of the arm and the hand.
The first cervical vertebra (C1) and the second (C2) form a pivot joint. A person can say "no" with this joint. The same sort of joint occurs at the wrist. The radius and the ulna form a pivot joint there as well. When a person turns the hand over to accept a coin, they are using this joint. The term for this movement is called supination.