Do you perhaps mean the pelvis?
Not counting the ankle, there are 4: Femur (Thigh bone) Patella (Kneecap) Tibia (Shin bone) Fibula (Thinner bone behind the Tibia)
you have the femur, tibia, and fibula. The patella is the knee cap if you want to count that also.
The bones in the upper leg are the femur (thigh bone) and the patella (kneecap). The femur is the longest and strongest bone in the human body and connects the hip to the knee joint, while the patella helps protect the knee joint and aids in movement.
The legs contain four bones each, if the feet and ankles are not included:The femur: thigh bone, also the longest and strongest in the body.The patella: kneecap.The fibula: the shorter of two bones in the lower leg, to the outside and behind the tibia.The tibia: the longer bone in the lower leg, connected to both ankle and knee (the fibula is only in the ankle, and connected to the back of this).
The anatomy of the upper leg and hip are closely connected because the hip joint connects the thigh bone (femur) to the pelvis. The muscles, tendons, and ligaments in the upper leg and hip work together to provide stability, support, and movement for the body.
well, you got your: foot bone, connected to your leg bone, connected to your hip bone, connected to your chest bone, connected to your arm bone, connected to your hand bone, 'dem bones, 'dem bones 'dem dry bones!
The lyrics were, "Your leg bone connected to your knee bone".
Leg bone
The leg bone
Yes, by the tendons... Bone to bone by ligament.
This is to the tune of bad romance...... (lady gaga) Mandible (chin) Clavicle (collarbone) humerus ( upper arm) to pelvis (hip) radius ulna (arm) phalanges (fingers) cranium (head) to scapula (pits) ribcage vertebrate (back) carpals (wrist) oh oh oh oh oh femur (leg) to patella (knee) to tibia (lower leg) fibula (lower leg) then you have tarsals whoah oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh bones of our body oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh bones of our body
Not counting the ankle, there are 4: Femur (Thigh bone) Patella (Kneecap) Tibia (Shin bone) Fibula (Thinner bone behind the Tibia)
Ezekiel cried, "Dem dry bones!" Ezekiel cried, "Dem dry bones!" Ezekiel cried, "Dem dry bones!" "Oh, hear the word of the Lord." The foot bone connected to the leg bone, The leg bone connected to the knee bone, The knee bone connected to the thigh bone, The thigh bone connected to the back bone, The back bone connected to the neck bone, The neck bone connected to the head bone, Oh, hear the word of the Lord! Dem bones, dem bones gonna walk aroun', Dem bones, dem bones, gonna walk aroun' Dem bones, dem bones, gonna walk aroun' Oh, hear the word of the Lord. The head bone connected to the neck bone, The neck bone connected to the back bone, The back bone connected to the thigh bone, The thigh bone connected to the knee bone, The knee bone connected to the leg bone, The leg bone connected to the foot bone, Oh, hear the word of the Lord!
Assuming you are referring to the human body, the largest bone is the humerus, which is the bone in your leg that joins from your hip to your knee.
Your "backbone" is actually a series of bones; the technical name is "spinal column", and it's a stack of bones called "vertebrae" connected by cartilage and muscles that allow it to bend and twist. At the bottom of the spine, the vertibrae connect to the pelvis, or "hip bones", which then connect to the thigh, the upper leg bones. The lowermost bone in the spine is the coccyx, or tailbone. If we had tails, that's where they would be connected.
you have the femur, tibia, and fibula. The patella is the knee cap if you want to count that also.
The bones in the upper leg are the femur (thigh bone) and the patella (kneecap). The femur is the longest and strongest bone in the human body and connects the hip to the knee joint, while the patella helps protect the knee joint and aids in movement.