symphisis
There is no fibrous connective tissue in bone, but there is dense irregular tissue known as periosteum that covers bones (all except the articulating surfaces) and provides attachment sites for tendons and ligaments.
Ligaments are the fibrous connective tissue that holds bones in a joint together.
A fibrous joint is a structural classification where bones are joined by fibrous connective tissue. Examples of fibrous joints include sutures in the skull and syndesmoses in the distal tibiofibular joint.
dense fibrous connective tissue
Intervertebral discs are the fibrous, elastic tissue that lie between each of the bones in the spine. They function as shock absorbers.
Ligaments are the fibrous tissues that connect bones to other bones and help to stabilize and support joints.
A tendon is a tough band of fibrous connective tissue that connects muscles to bones
The sutures in the cranium are fibrous joints between the bones of the skull. They are formed by dense fibrous connective tissue that holds the bones together but allows for some movement during growth and development.
Bones are made of osseous tissue, ligaments are made of fibrous connective tissue, and tendons are made of dense regular connective tissue.
Ligaments connect bone to bone. Tendons connect tissue to bone.
Sutures have fibrous joints where adjacent bones are united by a thin layer of dense connective tissue. Gomphosis is a type of fibrous joint specific to the attachment of teeth to the jawbone, where the tooth is held in a socket by periodontal ligaments.
Periosteum