Your muscles contract and stretch to produce movement.
For example, take your upper arms. You have your biceps and your triceps. As the biceps contract as you move your hand to your shoulder, your triceps stretch to allow movement. The same thing happens as you stretch your arm out straight, only vice versa.
I hope that helps.
No. Force is the driving substance of motion. A moving body can continue to be in motion when there are no external forces being applied on it. But a force would be required to initially set that body into motion.
Snakes move without legs because they wriggle from side to side.
Count Olaf
I'm guessing your eyes..
flagellait moves by its legs
it moves by its four legs like a bat
The same way you (or your dog) moves.
An animal with legs might be called a biped or a quadruped. An animal without legs can move in a two-anchor movement or in a lateral undulation movement.
There are no animals living without a birth defect that have six legs. The only species with that many legs are insects.
i think tat it moves our arms and our legs without muscles or bones we wouldont be able to move our legs.
i think tat it moves our arms and our legs without muscles or bones we wouldont be able to move our legs.
Giraffes-long neck and legs Elephants-a prehensile trunk Snake-moves without legs Porcupine-quills
They used their legs.
A cockroach moves with its legs. A cockroach has six legs. These legs allow him to get from one place to another.
a water beetle moves with its black furry from legs
it walks on four legs
flagellait moves by its legs
They walk on 4 legs.
deltiod
On both legs and arms.
A COYOTE moves in a qudrapedal fashion. (It moves on it's 4 legs)