It's found in the ligaments, tendons, cartilage, etc.
found in the tendon and ligaments
Actually, the hardest connective tissue in the body is not white fibrous tissue, but rather bone tissue. Bone is highly mineralized, primarily composed of calcium phosphate, which gives it strength and rigidity. White fibrous connective tissue, which includes tendons and ligaments, is strong but more flexible compared to bone. Its primary component is collagen, which provides tensile strength but does not match the hardness of bone.
Fibrocartilage is found most notably in the discs between vertebrae. This cartilage is a mixture of white fibrous tissue and cartilage tissue.
Collagen is the fibrous substance that give areolar tissue its strength.
The combining form "fasci/o" means "fibrous muscle cover, fascia." The fascia is the soft connective tissue that surrounds and supports the muscles. thanks to northstarlearning.com for the CMA review
pith
skeletal
The diaphysis is covered and protected by a fibrous connective tissue membrane, the periosteum.
A ligament is a type of tough elastic tissue. It is white and fibrous and connects one bone to another.
Basement membrane is another name for the fibrous connective tissue found in simple cuboidal epithelium. It provides structural support and helps anchor the epithelial cells to the underlying connective tissue.
Stroma is a vascular fibrous tissue found in the center of the ovary.
sinew, aka fascia, or tendons or ligaments, depending on what the tissue is doing -- they are all connective tissue, functioning to hold together various bits of flesh. The fibers are composed primarily of collagen (chain of amino acids, better known as proteins).