Some of the same activity that burns fat also develops muscles, but no, fat does not turn into muscle.
If you mean how do your muscles get larger, they get larger if they are used more often, but it may depend on what kind of training you do. If you mean fat, the muscle doesn't actually turn into fat, instead, the fat cells get larger and overtake the muscle mass.
No, your muscles will decrease in size when you stop exercising. Google muscle catabolism
If your asking if the body becomes weak if you stop working after for a long period of time say 3 months then yes you lose the muscle. If you mean why do my muscles hurt the next day then no. You just have to give your muscles a chance to recover and you will be a little stronger.
They have fat under their fur which keeps them warm and in turn helps their muscles to become strong so they can break up ice and hunt for seals.
no they just have a big layer of fat over there muscles
Muscles do not contain fat; fat is stored in adipose tissue, which is separate from muscle tissue. However, muscle tissue can be surrounded by fat deposits, especially in individuals with higher body fat percentages.
Your muscles hurt because you are actually tearing micro-fibers in your body. This in turn sets your body into recovery. The muscles will take nutrients from fat to create a stronger and bigger muscle.
No
Muscles, fat, and water.
no because it is fat but the nurtrience are taken out of the food you eat to help the muscles
when you stop exercising, you'r muscles get "looser". They end up looking fatty like, but do not actually turn into fat. If you're wanting to keep your body tone, keep exercising. Otherwise, your muscles will start to sag from lack of use.
nope, fat and muscle are unrelated