<Tr> <Td_colspan="2"> Anatomical terms of muscle (edit on Wikidata) </Td> </Tr> <P> The external oblique muscle (of the abdomen) (also external abdominal oblique muscle) is the largest and the outermost of the three flat muscles of the lateral anterior abdomen . </P> <P> The external oblique is situated on the lateral and anterior parts of the abdomen . It is broad, thin, and irregularly quadrilateral, its muscular portion occupying the side, its aponeurosis the anterior wall of the abdomen . In most humans (especially females), the oblique is not visible, due to subcutaneous fat deposits and the small size of the muscle . </P> <P> It arises from eight fleshy digitations, each from the external surfaces and inferior borders of the fifth to twelfth ribs (lower eight ribs). These digitations are arranged in an oblique line which runs inferiorly and anteriorly, with the upper digitations being attached close to the cartilages of the corresponding ribs, the lowest to the apex of the cartilage of the last rib, the intermediate ones to the ribs at some distance from their cartilages . </P>

Where is the external oblique located in the body