The sartorius, gracilis,and semitendinosus muscles attach tot he pes anserinus tendon of the leg. The three muscles have three tendons that joint to form the pes anserinus.
Center of the shoulderblade and attaches to the spine.
Origin is typically the proximal attachment of a muscle because it is the least moveable. The distal attachment is where a muscle inserts.
The bulk of the muscle is proximal. But part of it isn't.
the medial epicondyle and the lateral epicondyle - The gluteal tuberosity and linea aspera
The strongest Flexor of the hip (thigh) is illiopsoas muscle which is the merger of the illiacus and the psoas major muscle. The illiacus is on the medial side of the pelvic bone attaching to the femur and the psoas major muscle attaches from the lumbar vertebrae to the femur.
Ligament attaches bone to bone tendon attaches muscle to bone
The medial rectus inserts on the medial surface of the eye. It is innervated by the oculomotor nerve.
Brachialis - attaches from the anterior proximal humerus to the coronoid process of the ulna - strong flexor of the elbowBrachioradialis - attaches from the lateral supracondylar ridge of the humerus to the distal styloid of the radius - weak flexor of the elbow
gracilis
Adductor longus, its medial border
The semimembranosus is more medial.
No, a tendon attaches a muscle to bone. A ligament attaches a bone to another bone.