Want this question answered?
epimysium
The connective tissue surrounding the fascicle of a muscle is the perimysium.
Connective tissue sheath surrounding each fascicle
periosteum
From finest to most coarse the connective tissues start with endomysium which are then covered by perimysium to form a bundle of fibers called a fascicle. Many fascicles are bounded by the connective tissue epimusium which can either be bound to form tendons or aponeursoses (and these attach the muscle indirectly to bones, cartilages, or connective tissue coverings.)
periosteum
perimyseum
The epimysium surrounds the muscle, perimysium a bundle of fibers and the endomyosium surrounds the vesle.
Epineurium is the connective tissue surrounding a peripheral nerve.
two types of connective tissue coverings - bony vertebrae and tough, connective tissue meninges - plus a cushion of cerebrospinal fluid surround and protect the delicate nervous tissue of the spinal cord.
ligaments
3