Tendon in a sentence as a noun

What about if it's steak and tendon mix?

One of the props cut his wrist, and hit a few arteries and tendons.

Possibly, but look at the picture of the sliced out tendon.

I got a stress fracture on my shin from a tendon pulling on that area much more than the bone was used to.

It's hard to explain, but definitely not tendon or ligament pain.

I'm a runner who's just recovering from a injured Achilles tendon.

Bones and tendons can need months or even years to build up the strength to handle the stress of serious running barefoot.

Certain chord combinations are never very graceful and are a good recipe for tendon strain.

If you stop at parallel, there is shearing force on the patellar tendon as that's where the tension is at the time when you change directions.

The shoulder ache is barely noticeable, but I've got a hardened tendon along the neck that presses on my hearing nerve and makes the right ear ring.

It's not fashionable in the West to do this so we don't build up the right flexibility and tendon strength to do it comfortably.

As a programmer who tore my right distal radial biceps tendon and had surgery to repair it, I approve this message.

Even the plastic props, but especially the carbonfiber once can seriously cut flesh, en tendons.

Achilles tendon harvested from a cadaverYeah, I wouldn't recommend this route, either.

I have chronic IT band tightness on one side that pulls on something in my knee and gives me pain around the patellar tendon, but it goes away when I foam roll the side of my leg.- Do lots of warmup reps with bodyweight and/or just the bar.- Don't stop at parallel.

"\n \n Cook Ting laid down his knife and replied,\n "What I care about is the Way,\n which goes beyond skill.\n \n "When I first began cutting up oxen,\n all I could see was the ox itself.\n After three years I no longer saw the whole ox.\n And now -- now I go at it by spirit\n and don’t look with my eyes.\n Perception and understanding have come to a stop\n and spirit moves where it wants.\n \n "I go along with the natural makeup,\n strike in the big hollows,\n guide the knife through the big openings,\n and follow things as they are.\n So I never touch the smallest ligament or tendon,\n much less a main joint.\n \n "A good cook changes his knife once a year,\n because he cuts.\n A mediocre cook changes his knife once a month,\n because he hacks.\n I’ve had this knife of mine for nineteen years\n and I’ve cut up thousands of oxen with it,\n and yet the blade is still as newly sharpened.\n \n "There are spaces between the joints,\n and the blade of the knife has really no thickness.\n If you insert what has no thickness into such spaces,\n then there’s plenty of room,\n more than enough for the blade to play about in.\n That’s why after nineteen years\n the blade of my knife is still as newly sharpened.\n \n "However, whenever I come to a complicated place,\n I size up the difficulties,\n tell myself to watch out and be careful,\n keep my eyes on what I’m doing,\n work very slowly,\n and move the knife with the greatest subtlety,\n until -- flop!\n the whole thing comes apart\n like a clod of earth crumbling to the ground.\n \n "I stand there holding the knife and look all around me,\n completely satisfied and reluctant to move on,\n and then I wipe off the knife and put it away.

Tendon definitions

noun

a cord or band of inelastic tissue connecting a muscle with its bony attachment

See also: sinew