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- Aquiline nose vs Roman nose - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
An aquiline nose (also called a Roman nose or hook nose): is a human nose with a prominent bridge, giving it the appearance of being curved or slightly bent The word aquiline comes from the Lati
- meaning - but Ireland has ever been a shipwreck coast - English . . .
His nose was magnificent, a true Roman nose which must have puzzled his Irish confreres, but Ireland has ever been a shipwreck coast The last clause sounds like an incomprehensible non-sequitur
- etymology - Where does the term on the nose come from? - English . . .
For example, The busload of students arrived at the museum at ten o'clock right on the nose , or He guessed the final score on the nose This term, like on the button, may come from boxing, where the opponent's nose is a highly desired target
- Meaning of the phrase frog-walker in reference to a horse
It is a cowboy term for a horse that walks in a somewhat frog-like fashion in a series of short hops, which means the horse is unlikely to move too wildly and throw its rider The term comes up in a few list of cowboy slang and books on cowboying Dictionary of the American West, Win Blevins, Texas A M University Press, 1 Aug 2008, defines a frog walk as: A form of mild bucking in short hops
- What is the name of the area of skin between the nose and the upper lip . . .
Upper lip is everything between the mouth opening and the base of the nose Lower lip is everything between the mouth opening and the chin Vermilion zone is the pink, non-wet part of the lips Cutaneous lip is the skin-colored part of the lips Philtrum is a vertical subsection of the cutaneous upper lip, between the ridges under the nose
- User Тарас - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Q A for linguists, etymologists, and serious English language enthusiasts
- User 斯波隼斗 - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Q A for linguists, etymologists, and serious English language enthusiasts
- What does too on the nose mean? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
What does "too on the nose" mean, especially as applied to art? I use the expression but struggle to explicitly articulate what I mean My best attempt is that I use it to refer to film, music, e
- User هيثم الاصيل - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Q A for linguists, etymologists, and serious English language enthusiasts
- Is there a term for letting out an exasperated sigh through the nose?
0 It depends on the type of sound that comes with the air blowing out of the nose If you're looking for a word that describes the same kind of soft sound that comes out of the mouth when a person sighs, I would call it the same word--a sigh A snort makes a completely different sound and is also used to describe inhalation
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