ulna bone
Both your lower legs and lower arms are made of two bones each. The radius is the larger bone of the arm, analagous to the larger tibia of the leg. The ulna is the smaller bone of the arm, while the fibula is the smaller bone of the leg.
The humerus is the bone in the upper arm. The radius and the ulna are the bones in the forearm. The femur is the bone in the thigh. The tibia and the fibula are the bones in the lower leg.
Humerus, fibula, and scapula are examples of bones in the human body. The humerus is the bone of the upper arm, the fibula is one of the bones in the lower leg, and the scapula is commonly known as the shoulder blade.
The scientific name for the inner lower arm bone is the ulna. It runs parallel to the radius, the other bone in the lower arm. It plays a key role in the structure and function of the forearm.
I believe you're talking about the patella, or the kneecap.
upper leg bone lower leg bone wrist bone thigh bone collar bone rib cage back bone skull tarsals eye socket shoulder bone knee cup jaw bone lower arm bone upper arm bone hyoid elbow bone ulnq scapula sternum metarcarpals vertebrae ciavacle femur tibia fibula phalanges hip bone phalngesradius
Arm: Humerus, Ulna, and Radius, Carpal bones Leg: Femur, Patella, Fabellae, tibia, fibula, tarsal bones
Depending on which bone(s) is/are involved, you would say a fractured humerus, radius, or ulna; referring to the upper arm bone, and the lower arm bone that rotates around the other lower arm bone respectively.
If it is the fatter bone in the leg, then it is the tibia
yes it is next to the radius bone in your lower arm.
The radius is the large bone in the arm.
joint