talus
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.
No, there is no bone in your tongue. The tongue is a muscle, and only a muscle.
I believe you are talking about the hyoid bone. It's the only bone in the body not directly connected to another bone. It is instead attached to ligaments and muscles.
There are two: the incus and the talus (or four if you count two on each side of the body). The incus is a middle ear bone. The other two middle ear bones, the stapes and malleus, have attachments with the Stapedius and Tensor Tympani muscles respectively. The Talus, which is in the foot, also has no muscle attachments.
yes the hyoid is an actual bone it is just not attached to any other bones
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...
The tongue, there is also suppose to be another tiny one but I cannot remember it.
Only skeletal muscles are connected to bones. They don't attach directly to the bones, but are attached by tendons that emerge at the ends of the muscle groups or individual muscles. Smooth muscles are organ muscles, and cardiac muscle is specialized conductive muscle of the heart. Answer courtesy of gallop
the answer is the tough or the penis
Quadriceps muscles are attached to the tibia via patella. Patella is a sesamoid bone. On the other the three of the four muscles are attached to the femur bone. Rectus femoris is attached to the hip bone as well. So it can act on hip bone also. Other way round it can take support of hip bone to act on tibia. Other three muscles are specially designed to act on tibia bone only. They are originated from femur bone.
The femur is the only bone running through the thigh muscle. It is the largest and strongest bone in the body.
With the exception of the tongue (the heart is a special case), all muscles are attached at both ends