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BODY (THE)

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see:

APPEARANCE

ATTIRE

BALD

BEARDS

BEAUTY

BLONDES

BLOOD

BREASTS

CELIBACY

CHILDBIRTH

CLOTHES

COSMETICS

DIET

DRESS

EARS

EXERCISE, EYES

FACE

FASHION, FAT

GLASSES

GLUTTONY

GROOMING

HAIR

HATS, HEARING, HEARTS

HEALTH

ITCHING

MIRRORS

NOISE

NOSE

NUDITY

OBESITY

PERFUME

PULCHRITUDE

RED HEADS

SENSES (THE)

SEEING

SEX

SHOES, SHORT PEOPLE

SLEEP, SMELL

SOUNDS

SPIRIT

STYLE

TATTOOS

TIRED

UGLY

VANITY

VIRGINS

--

Entrails don't care for travel,
Entrails don't care for stress,
Entrails are better kept folded inside you
For outside, they make a mess.
--Connie Bensley (1929- )
"Entrails" [1987]


^^

John Pierpont Morgan, Sr. (1837-1913)
American banker, financier, and benefactor of the arts.

Morgan's nose was disfigured by a skin disease that made
it swollen and fiery. People, while pretending politely not
to notice anything extraordinary, were nonetheless
mesmerized by it. There is the story of the nervous
hostess at the tea table , who inquired, "Do you take
nose in your tea, Mr. Morgan?"

^^


The body of a young woman is God's greatest
achievement. . .Of course, He could have
built it to last longer but you can't have
everything.
--Neil Simon (1927- )
American playwright,
_The Gingerbread Lady_ [1970]

This Englishwoman is so refined
She has no bosom and no behind.
--Stevie Smith (1902-1971)
English poet and novelist

-----

adipose (noun)
Fat under the skin and surrounding major organs,
providing stored energy, insulation, and protection.

diaphanous (adj.) [dI-'æ-fê-nês]
Thin and fragile, translucent, filmy or flimsy.

ectomorph (noun)
A person with a lean body build.
ectomorphic adj.

lithe (adj.)
Flexible and supple: able to move or bend the body lightly and gracefully

tittle (noun) ['tit-êl]
1. A small jot, the dot of an [i], cross on a [t], the beard on [ç],
or a diacritic such as the tilde on [ñ];
2. Minute, incredibly tiny, smaller even than an iota-indeed, an
iota (Greek short [i]) is capped by a tittle.
Usage 1: This noun is unrelated to the verb "to tittle," which was
clipped from the rhyme compound "tittle-tattle." It should not be
confused with a titter, either, for that is a suppressed giggle.
Think of a tittle as the smallest thing or amount visible without
a microscope.


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