muscles connect to ligaments connect to bones!
muscle attaches to bone by a tendon. muscle is attached to an immovable bone, this is called orgin, and the other end of the muscle is attached to a movable bone. this is called insertion.
A muscle insertion is the end of a muscle attached to the free-moving bone of its joint. A muscle origin is the end of the muscle attached to the relatively fixed bone of the joint.
The end of the muscle that is attached to the stationary bone is the point of origin. The muscle end that is attached to the moving bone is the point of insertion, and the action is what the muscle actually does.
they dont u retard
Insertion
INSERTION
on one end of a tendon comes from the muscles while the other hand is attached to a bone,then it pulls
Insertion point, which most probably is a tendon.
A muscle attached at only one end is called unipennate muscle. It has a single tendon and its muscle fibers run diagonally to the tendon.
Scapula is very interesting bone. It holds the upper limb, but have no bony attachment to your thorax. It is attached to thorax, through the collar bone or the clavicle. Lateral end of the clavicle is attached to the lateral end of the spine of the scapula. On the inside of the spine of the scapula and clavicle, you have insertion of the muscle called as trapezius. From out side of this, you have origin of the deltoid muscle. Technically and mechanically, the trapezius muscle continues as deltoid muscle.
The muscle that is attached at one end is typically referred to as a "tendinous" muscle. In anatomy, many muscles have tendons that connect them to bone at one end, allowing for movement when the muscle contracts. For example, the biceps brachii has a tendon at one end that attaches to the scapula and another that connects to the radius in the forearm. This arrangement enables the muscle to exert force and facilitate joint movement.
Alright, now that the riff-raff is outta the way - Origin is the attachment of a muscle (tendon) that is stationary. Insertion is at the other end of the muscle that is attached to a movable bone, also with a tendon. Hoped that helps.