The 3 ossicles are "little bones" found in the middle ear. They are the smallest bones in the human body, and each one has its own name:
The stapedius muscle is attached to the stapes. It is the smallest striated muscle in the human body.
Stapedius
The little bone in your ear called the stapes bone is the smallest bone other than alien bones and warewolf bones
The stapes is one of the small bones in the middle ear. Sound waves hit the ear drum and together with the other bones it tends to transmit the vibrations from the ear drum to the cochlea to the brain so as to unable one to hear.
The stapes (aka stirrup) is the smallest of the three auditory ossicles of the middle ear. These "little bones" amplify and transmit sound vibrations from the tympanic membrane (eardrum) to the oval window. The stapes is in direct contact with the oval window.
Hyoid
oval window
stapes
Bones are attached to each other by ligaments, strong bands of tissue that may be flexible in some motions.(The similar tissues, tendons, connect the muscles to other muscles and to bones.)
There are only three bones in each ear, the mallus, the incus, and the stapes.
The three bones in your ear (the Auditory Ossicle) are the smallest in the human body. They are the malleus, the incus, and the stapes. Commonly called the hammer, the anvil and the stirrup respectively.
the incus transfers the vibration from the malleus to the stapes