The tongue, there is also suppose to be another tiny one but I cannot remember it.
The tongue is the muscle that is only attached at one end. The surface of the tongue is covered with taste buds, and saliva is produced by the salivary glands to keep the tongue moist.
Your tongue is the only muscle in your body that is attached at only one end.
The tongue is attached at only one end
The tongue
The tongue
the answer is the tough or the penis
Yes. The tongue is the only muscle in the entire human body that is only attached on one extremity. In that sense the tongue is more like a tentacle than a muscle...
muscles can only pull so a bone with only one muscle on it would be pulled to the extreme of the muscles contraction and stay there.
The "movable" end of a muscle is called the insertion. The "immobile" end is called the origin. Shortening, or contraction, of a muscle causes the origin and insertion to become closer to one another.
The tongue
on one end of a tendon comes from the muscles while the other hand is attached to a bone,then it pulls
One end of a tendon comes from the end of a muscle while the other end is attached to a bone. Some tendons are round while others are flat. Tendons also differ in length and thickness.
The injury would allow for the joint the muscles are attached to, to move in one direction...either only up becasue the lower muscle was damaged...or only down because the top muscle of the pair was damaged.
The origin is the immovable end, while insertion is the movable end.Some muscles have more than one origin, like the biceps brachii. The insertion of the biceps brachii is attached to the radius of your forearm while the origins are located on your scapula.
It is the tough, fibrous tendons that actually attach the muscle to the bones of the skeleton. Generally, tendons attach to at least two different bones to create a lever for the muscles to act upon - the tendons at one end of the muscle belly being attached to one bone, and at the other end, the tendon/s attaches to the other bone. The fibrous tissue surrounding the muscle is all continuous with the tendon at each end.
The umbilical cord is attached to the belly of the baby in one end and in the other end it's attached to the placenta where the baby get the nourishment from. The placenta is attached to the uterus wall.
The biceps muscle is located in the front area of the upper arm. The biceps muscle helps to stabilize the large bone in the upper arm (the humerus) in the shoulder socket. It also helps to accelerate and decelerate the arm during overhead activities, like tennis or pitching. The biceps tendons keep the biceps muscle attached to the shoulder at one end and the elbow at the other end. Tendons are strong cord-like structures that connect each end of the biceps muscle to bones. At one end of the biceps muscle, tendons connect the biceps to the shoulder in two places. At the other end of the muscle, tendons connect the biceps muscle to the smaller bone (radius) in the lower arm. Source:AAOS