olecranon process
Your forearm. There are two bones in your forearm-- the radius and the ulna. The ulna is the larger bone at the elbow and forms the point "olecranon" of the elbow. At the wrist the ulna is the smaller bone.
Weenus is a slang term for the loose skin on your elbow. " The stretchy area of skin located on the posterior of the elbow centered particularly over the olecranon process of the ulna." The weenus is the very tip of your elbow. The pointed part.
The process that forms a zygote is called fertilization.
Precipitation forms stalagtites.
The olecranon process of the ulna is what you feel as the bony poiny of the elbow.
Where the "wenis" is, at the back of the elbow
olecranon process
The slang term weenis (or wenis), which is singular, refers to the loose outer skin of the elbow, which is more properly the olecranal skin (the olecranon process of the ulna forms the point of the elbow).
olecranon process
Transverse Process and Spinous Process
The antecubital space is the space at the front of the elbow.
The olecranon fossa of the humerus articulates with the olecranon process of the ulna when the elbow is extended. This forms the back part of the elbow joint.
Your forearm. There are two bones in your forearm-- the radius and the ulna. The ulna is the larger bone at the elbow and forms the point "olecranon" of the elbow. At the wrist the ulna is the smaller bone.
elbow boneUlna is the medically correct term for the bone that forms the elbow area of the arm.
The elbow is a joint, not a bone. The elbow is formed when the humerus' trochlea (a sort of "bar" at the end of it) is attached to the trochlear (or semilunar) notch of the ulna. The olecranon on the ulna forms the hard armour-like plate on the elbow joint.
The wrist is located distal to the elbow. Meaning the wrist is farther from the point of origin than the elbow.