The muscles which allow you to extend your wrist and flare your fingers are the flexor muscles in the wrist and the prime movers in the fingers. These muscles will coordinate to adduct the wrist and the fingers.
The extensor muscles allow you to flare (straighten) your fingers.
finger muscles :D lol
There are no muscles in the human finger. The muscles that bend the finger are located in the palm and in the mid forearm, and are connected to the finger bones by tendons, which pull on and move the fingers.
Visually speaking, no you cannot. There are only tendons in the fingers, so it is impossible to have 'muscular' fingers per se. It is possible to have very strong fingers/grip, but this comes from forearm strength, not from finger strength.
Digital adductors
Muscles in your forearm.
Muscles allow the skeleton to move.
fingers
The bones in your fingers have joints, and muscles that allow them to be articulated. The bone of the skull is a one piece item, and has no points of articulation. The hand is made to move so you can grasp things, while your skull is there to protect your brain.
To grip a bat, you use the muscles to contract the fingers. To lift it, the preceding muscles and all the arm, shoulder and back muscles.
Because there is no space for it to fit.
There are 16 pairs of muscles in the horses ears that allow mobility.
You have no muscles in your fingers only tendons. The muscles in your lower arm control your hand movements and grip strength