No. Tendons connect muscles to bones.
Yes, tendons told joints together, ligaments connect muscles to bones.
Firstly they connect muscle to bone, without which no motion would be possible, and secondly they provide stability because they are somewhat elastic.
Tendons connect muscles to bones.
Technically, bones move AT a joint, BY the power of the muscles connected to them, via the tendons which connect the muscles to the bones.
Impingement syndrome is inflammation of tendons caught in a narrow space within the shoulder joint.
The tissue that connects bone to bone are called ligaments. They are responsible for providing stability to a joint. Cartilage, and ligaments make up the "connective tissue". And also Tendons (sinew), Auductive and Conductive Muscles and a decent argument for Joint Cartillage.
Ligaments are used to bind the articular ends of bones together reinforcing the joint capsule. These can be thickenings in the fibrous layer of the joint capsule or accessory structures that are located outside of the joint capsule.
The hinge joint.
Structures closely related to tendons (joint capsules, tendon sheaths, pulleys, retinacula, of tendons, but do not make any major contribution to their tensile strength.
in any joint.
ligaments and tendons and bones!!!!!!!!!
Bones are attached to each other by tendons
I believe that is a joint.
tendons
Technically, bones move AT a joint, BY the power of the muscles connected to them, via the tendons which connect the muscles to the bones.
Ligaments, and sometimes even tendons
TENDONS are at the end of a muscle that connects to bone Ligaments connect bone to bone at the joint. They give the joint stability, so muscles and tendons can move bones through normal ROM.
Flexor and extensor tendons connected to skeletal muscleRead more: What_moves_your_joints
Impingement syndrome is inflammation of tendons caught in a narrow space within the shoulder joint.
Proprioceptors