Neither, the wings and legs are actually attached to the thorax.
Attached to an insect's thorax are * The head * The abdomen * Six legs * Two or four wings (occasionally absent)There are several things attached to the insect's thorax. The thorax is attached to the head, legs, wings and abdomen.
The honey bee has six legs attached to its thorax.
Legs are attached to the abdomen.
A bee has three body segments: head, thorax, and abdomen. The wings and legs are attached to the thorax.
The legs and wings are attached to the thorax.
Grasshoppers are typical insects. If you look at its body you will see that like any typical insect, it is split into three main parts: In front the head; In the middle a part we call the thorax, which means the chest; At the back is the abdomen, which means something like the "belly". The thorax is the part where the legs and the wings grow, neither the head nor the abdomen. People who think "The jumping legs of a grasshopper are attached its butt." need to do their homework before talking about such things.
The head is the first part, with antennae, eyes and mouthparts. The thorax is the middle, with the legs and wings if the insect has them, and containing the muscles to use them. The third part is called the abdomen, with no appendages. This part houses the internal organs.
false
* head *6 legs *2 or 4 wings and abdomen some don't have wings.
The thorax. See the related link for more information.
The thorax wich is divided into the meothorax, metathorax and prothorax each bearing a pair of legs. The wings are usually attached to the mesothorax and the metathorax a pair on each.
Wings, a pair of antennae, proboscis, legs and the abdomen.