Both the radius and ulna move with the hand in a rotational sense.
The job of the bone in your arm is to make sure your arm moves in any possible way.
There is no single bone that forms the arm. There's a whole lot of them, especially if you include the hand as part of the arm.
It's part of your arm. It is the bone extending from the shoulder to the elbow.The humerus is the arm bone, where numerous muscles are located, e.g. the biceps brachii and triceps brachii muscles.the humerus bone in your body in below your shoulder and above your elbowHumerus is the long bone that makes up the lower part of the arm.
The upper arm bone is the humerus, nicknamed the "funny bone" because of its similarity to the word "humorous".
the pelvic bone and the top of the femur bone. also your shoulder and the top of your arm bone.
The arm I should have thought, unless its a trick question
The human leg and foot.
...probably not. The things above the arm are the shoulder, neck and head. With at least one of your arms, you are probably able to swing your arm back so that your hand is pointing up, palm against your spine, and your hand is as high up toward your head as you can get it. If it is your right arm, continue to curl your arm/hand toward your right shoulder. You'll feel the edge of a flat bone. That is your right shoulder blade. Ditto on the left.
Musically, it would be connected to the "arm bone" (or "wrist bone", depending on the version).Anatomically, there's no such thing as a "hand bone" (there's no "arm bone" or "wrist bone" either), at least not in the sense that there's a single bone known by that name. The hand (and arm, and wrist) contain multiple bones.The bones in the hand are called phalanges (the bones in the fingers and thumb) and metacarpals (the bones buried in the palm). If your version of "Dem Bones" has the hand bone connected to the arm bone without an intermediate "wrist bone", then the "hand bone" would include the carpals (in the wrist) as well (or maybe those are lumped into "arm bone"; the song is so imprecise it's hard to tell).The carpals all have individual names. The metacarpals are numbered.based on what finger they're in (the thumb is 1, and the numbering goes up moving toward the pinky). The phalanges are numbered as well (the same number as the metacarpal they connect with), with the one that actually has a joint with the metacarpal being the "proximal" phalange, and the one furthest away being the "distal" phalange. In the fingers (but not the thumb) there's a phalange between those two, known (sensibly) as the "intermediate" phalange. So the "fourth proximal phalange" of the left hand would be the one normally surrounded by a wedding ring.Technically that doesn't answer your question, so here's the literal answer. This should have been obvious, but the "hand bone(s)" are located in the hand.
The shorter bone in your forearm. Hold you hand out in front of you with your arm bent and your thumb at the top of your hand, the bone at the top of your forearm is your "radius" the bone at the bottom of your forearm is your "ulnar".
the bone at the top of arm is humerus
Yes it is, there's also the radius