Want this question answered?
the sliding joint
gliding
Gliding joints allow bones to slide along each other such as the wrists and ankles. Also known as a synovial joint, these bones use synovial fluid to glide more smoothly.
gliding joint, also known as a plane joint or planar joint, is a common type of synovial joint formed between bones that meet at flat or nearly flat articular surfaces. Gliding joints allow the bones to glide past one another in any direction along the plane of the joint — up and down, left and right, and diagonally.
Carpal bones are gliding joints, so movement between them is multiaxial in that they can do every motion except pivot, only to a slight degree.
is it the condyloid
Hinge joints
Vertebrae are connected by gliding joints.
plane or gliding
Gliding Joints can be found in your ankles, wrists and spine.
the site of junction or union between bones, especially one that allows motion of the bones.
gliding