it is connected at the bottom
Uvula - the small flap in the back of your throat
your pelvis is connected to your femur, your femurs connected to your patella, your patellas connected to your tibia, your tibias connected to your fibula, your fibulas connected to your tarsal bones, your tarsal bones connected to your metatarsal bones, your metatarsal bones connected to your phalanges, your phalanges are connected to.... your toe nails?
it means like animals are connected with food like an alligator with grass
scissors have two connected levers that can be used to cut paper or cloth.
Faulty
The ulna.
Not directly! The Ulna is the bone in your forearm, the pelvis is the bone your hip attaches to.
The eight carpal bones are connected distally to the five metacarpals, and proximally to the radius and ulna. All connections are made of synovial connective tissue.
The ulna is the proper name for the ulna.
yes they are because you cant bend both of them like your fingers.
There are three types of bones within the arm. The large bone is the humerus and is in the upper part of the arm. The radius is part of the forearm and are smaller bones. The ulna is another part of a bone in the forearm.
Actually there are 3 bones in the arm. The Humerus, which is where your Biceps are, the Radius, which is the bone connected to your thumb, and the Ulna, which is connected to your pinky finger. I always remember Ulna, because it sounds like an old lady's name, and old lady's always have their little tea cups and stick their pinky in the air when they sip! My science teacher taught me that. <3 ya! LuvsCam :)
b. Ulna; the ulna is a bone found in the forearm, not in the leg.
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 Radius and Ulna in the arm are connected by many ligaments at the joints. This allows for free movement and it keeps them together. Also, the Bronchialis muscle of the forearm connects to both bones at both ends, giving another holder to the bones.
There are several, the main one being the biceps brachii.
The elbow joint is connected by a short connective tissue called the annular ligament, which stabilizes the joint and allows for rotation of the radius around the ulna.