The olecranon process of the ulna is what you feel as the bony poiny of the elbow.
Where the "wenis" is, at the back of the elbow
elbow boneUlna is the medically correct term for the bone that forms the elbow area of the arm.
The olecranon process is the part of the ulna that hooks around the bottom of the humerus and forms the elbow joint.
the humerus, the ulna and the radiusHumerus (upper arm) radius and ulna (lower)Humerus, Radius and UlnaRadious I believeThe radius, ulna and humerus.Humerous, Ulna & radiusThe humerus at the top and the radius and ulna at the bottom.It is fromed by the humerus of the upper arm, and radius and ulna of the forearm.
To you mean the joint itself? The elbow, AKA the proximal-distal axis of the humerus and ulna, respectively.Or just the distal epiphysis of the humerus (the rounded head of the bone which is farther fromthe arm's point of attachment to the torso)
Your forearm. There are two bones in your forearm-- the radius and the ulna. The ulna is the larger bone at the elbow and forms the point "olecranon" of the elbow. At the wrist the ulna is the smaller bone.
The bony prominence of the elbow, on the upper end of the ulna.
The olecranon fossa is a depression in the humerus bone of the upper arm, and it is specifically designed to accommodate the olecranon process of the ulna bone. The olecranon is a prominent bony projection at the end of the ulna that forms the bony part of the elbow.
Where the "wenis" is, at the back of the elbow
The elbow is not in and of itself a bone. It is the joining of the humerus, ulna, and radius-most specifially, the humerus and ulna. The bony point that we think of as the elbow is part of the ulna (one of the forearm bones). It is called the olecranon process. The smaller bumps on the sides are parts of the humerus (upper arm bone). They are called epicondyles.
elbow boneUlna is the medically correct term for the bone that forms the elbow area of the arm.
Arm is made up of three long bones: our humerus in our upper arm and our ulna and radius in our lower arm. our upper and lower arms are connected at elbow by a hinge joint between humerus and ulna. our radius and ulna are linked at our elbow in a way that allows us to rotate our hand and forearm by more than 180 degrees. our ulna bone forms the point of our elbow.
The slang term weenis (or wenis), which is singular, refers to the loose outer skin of the elbow, which is more properly the olecranal skin (the olecranon process of the ulna forms the point of the elbow).
The elbow is a joint, not a bone. The elbow is formed when the humerus' trochlea (a sort of "bar" at the end of it) is attached to the trochlear (or semilunar) notch of the ulna. The olecranon on the ulna forms the hard armour-like plate on the elbow joint.
In the groove between the head of the ulna and the olecranon process at the elbow; at the medial epicondyle of the humerus.
The olecranon process is the part of the ulna that hooks around the bottom of the humerus and forms the elbow joint.
the humerus, the ulna and the radiusHumerus (upper arm) radius and ulna (lower)Humerus, Radius and UlnaRadious I believeThe radius, ulna and humerus.Humerous, Ulna & radiusThe humerus at the top and the radius and ulna at the bottom.It is fromed by the humerus of the upper arm, and radius and ulna of the forearm.