1. | Pumps all your Life | A. | Heart and Smooth Muscle. | |
2. | Example of Smooth Muscle | B. | Voluntary Muscle and Straited Muscle. | |
3. | Example of Cardiac Muscle | C. | A rigid bar resting on a pivot used to help move a heavy or firmly fixed load with one end when pressure is applied to the other. | |
4. | The Muscle Moves Food Through Digestive System | D. | A type of muscle tissue that is found only in the heart and is distinguishable from the two other forms of muscle smooth muscle that moves internal organs such as the bowels and vessels such as the artery walls and skeletal muscle. Cardiac muscle is responsible for pumping blood throughout the body. | |
5. | Example of Skeletal Muscle | E. | A muscle that is connected to the skeleton to form part of the mechanical system that moves the limbs and other parts of the body. | |
6. | Involunatary Muscle | F. | The output force is in between the fulcrum and the input force | |
7. | Voluntary Muscle | G. | Stomach | |
8. | 2nd Class Lever | H. | The muscle that you can’t control consciously. | |
9. | 3rd Class Lever | I. | The input force is in between the output force and the fulcrum. | |
10. | Tendon | J. | Muscle types that are attached to bones by thick bands of tissue . | |
11. | 1st Class Lever | K. | The voluntary muscle is the muscle that you can control. | |
12. | Levers | L. | Stomach and Smooth Muscle. | |
13. | Skeletal Muscle | M. | Heart | |
14. | Smooth Muscle | N. | Muscle tissue in which the contractile fibrils are not highly ordered occurring in the gut and other internal organs and not under voluntary control. | |
15. | Cardiac Muscle | O. | If the fulcrum is in the between the output force and input force as in the seesaw . |
M | 1. | Pumps all your Life | A. | Heart and Smooth Muscle. |
G | 2. | Example of Smooth Muscle | B. | Voluntary Muscle and Straited Muscle. |
A | 3. | Example of Cardiac Muscle | C. | A rigid bar resting on a pivot used to help move a heavy or firmly fixed load with one end when pressure is applied to the other. |
L | 4. | The Muscle Moves Food Through Digestive System | D. | A type of muscle tissue that is found only in the heart and is distinguishable from the two other forms of muscle smooth muscle that moves internal organs such as the bowels and vessels such as the artery walls and skeletal muscle. Cardiac muscle is responsible for pumping blood throughout the body. |
B | 5. | Example of Skeletal Muscle | E. | A muscle that is connected to the skeleton to form part of the mechanical system that moves the limbs and other parts of the body. |
H | 6. | Involunatary Muscle | F. | The output force is in between the fulcrum and the input force |
K | 7. | Voluntary Muscle | G. | Stomach |
F | 8. | 2nd Class Lever | H. | The muscle that you can’t control consciously. |
I | 9. | 3rd Class Lever | I. | The input force is in between the output force and the fulcrum. |
J | 10. | Tendon | J. | Muscle types that are attached to bones by thick bands of tissue . |
O | 11. | 1st Class Lever | K. | The voluntary muscle is the muscle that you can control. |
C | 12. | Levers | L. | Stomach and Smooth Muscle. |
E | 13. | Skeletal Muscle | M. | Heart |
N | 14. | Smooth Muscle | N. | Muscle tissue in which the contractile fibrils are not highly ordered occurring in the gut and other internal organs and not under voluntary control. |
D | 15. | Cardiac Muscle | O. | If the fulcrum is in the between the output force and input force as in the seesaw . |