1. Ball-and-Socket Joints
Movement: Move in almost all directions (rotation, swinging).
Examples:
Shoulder
Hip
These joints let you rotate your arm or leg in a circle.
✅ 2. Hinge Joints
Movement: Back-and-forth like a door hinge.
Examples:
Elbow
Knee
Fingers and toes
They allow bending and straightening.
✅ 3. Pivot Joints
Movement: Rotation around a single axis.
Examples:
Neck (between the first two vertebrae)
Forearm (radius and ulna twisting motion)
Let you turn your head and rotate your forearm (like turning a doorknob).
✅ 4. Gliding (Plane) Joints
Movement: Bones slide over each other.
Examples:
Wrists
Ankles
Between small bones of the spine
These allow small smooth movements in many directions.
✅ 5. Saddle Joints
Movement: Back-and-forth and side-to-side (but no rotation).
Example:
Thumb joint (carpometacarpal joint)
This gives the thumb its wide range of motion.
✅ 6. Condyloid (Ellipsoidal) Joints
Movement: Movement in two directions: bending/straightening and side-to-side.
Examples:
Wrist joint (between radius and carpal bones)
Joints between fingers and the hand
⭐ Summary Table
Joint Type Example Movement
Ball-and-socket Shoulder, hip All directions, rotation
Hinge Knee, elbow Bend/straighten
Pivot Neck, forearm Rotation
Gliding Wrist, ankle Sliding
Saddle Thumb Back-forth + side-side
Condyloid Wrist, fingers Two-direction movement
Joints are needed to allow movement and flexibility in the body. They connect bones together, provide support for the muscles, and help with shock absorption during activities. Joints also enable us to perform a wide range of movements such as bending, twisting, and stretching.
Bones move by your musclesBones have joints that let them move back and forth, muscles help them move, and you need energy to move your body like healthy How_do_your_bones_move.
joints, ligaments, cartilage
Bones in the body are connected by joints, which are areas where two or more bones meet. Joints can be classified as immovable (such as in the skull), slightly movable (such as in the spine), and freely movable (such as in the knee or hip). They provide the flexibility and support needed for movement and stability in the body.
The hinge joint, Ball-and- socket joint, pivot joint, and gliding joint helps you move. They help you move because it move's you body arms, legs, neck, ankels,and wrist and help you move side to side back and forth
you joints is help you move
Bones help support the body. If you didn't have them you would collapse. The 4 types of joints in the bones help you move your body parts.
Your bones, joints, and muscles
All joints except immovable joints allow bones to move.
having differnt advantage in our body makes us move freely
There are joints that move back and forth ( elbow ) and other joints that move in a circle ( hip, ankle, shoulder. )
The main type of joint(s) that "move" bones are synovial joints. However there are several subcategories of synovial joints (saddle, planar, pivotal, ball and socket, etc.), some more movable than others.
joints
This actually depends on which joints you are asking about. but the gross function of the joints are to faciliate human movement and help us to move about. They make bones easier to move and flexible.
So when ever you get constapation issues you can push the dern thing out or when your giving birth.
movable joints allow the body to make a wide range of movements 4 types of movable joints are .hinge joint .ball-and-socket joint .pivot joint .gliding joint
Joints are needed to allow movement and flexibility in the body. They connect bones together, provide support for the muscles, and help with shock absorption during activities. Joints also enable us to perform a wide range of movements such as bending, twisting, and stretching.