| a printed punctuation mark (‽), available only in some typefaces, designed to combine the question mark (?) and the exclamation point (!), indicating a mixture of query and interjection, as after a rhetorical question. |
| a screen or mat covered with a dark material for shielding a camera lens from excess light or glare. |
skin (skɪn) ![]() | |
| —n | |
| 1. | a. the tissue forming the outer covering of the vertebrate body: it consists of two layers (the dermis and epidermis), the outermost of which may be covered with hair, scales, feathers, etc. It is mainly protective and sensory in function |
| b. dermis See also epidermis (as modifier): a skin disease Related: cutaneous, dermatoid | |
| 2. | a person's complexion: a fair skin |
| 3. | any similar covering in a plant or lower animal |
| 4. | any coating or film, such as one that forms on the surface of a liquid |
| 5. | Compare hide unsplit leather made from the outer covering of various mammals, reptiles, etc |
| 6. | the outer covering of a fur-bearing animal, dressed and finished with the hair on |
| 7. | a container made from animal skin |
| 8. | the outer covering surface of a vessel, rocket, etc |
| 9. | a person's skin regarded as his life: to save one's skin |
| 10. | informal (often plural) (in jazz or pop use) a drum |
| 11. | informal short for skinhead |
| 12. | slang a cigarette paper used for rolling a cannabis cigarette |
| 13. | slang (Irish) a person; sort: he's a good old skin |
| 14. | by the skin of one's teeth by a narrow margin; only just |
| 15. | informal get under one's skin to irritate one |
| 16. | jump out of one's skin to be very startled |
| 17. | informal no skin off one's nose not a matter that affects one adversely |
| 18. | skin and bone extremely thin |
| 19. | thick skin an insensitive nature |
| 20. | thin skin a sensitive nature |
| —vb , skins, skinning, skinned | |
| 21. | (tr) to remove the outer covering from (fruit, etc) |
| 22. | (tr) to scrape a small piece of skin from (a part of oneself) in falling, etc: he skinned his knee |
| 23. | ( |
| 24. | slang (tr) to strip of money; swindle |
| —adj | |
| 25. | relating to or for the skin: skin cream |
| 26. | slang chiefly (US) involving or depicting nudity: skin magazines |
| Related: cutaneous, dermatoid | |
| [Old English scinn, from Old Norse skinn] | |
| 'skinless | |
| —adj | |
| 'skinlike | |
| —adj | |
"Ful of fleissche Y was to fele, Now ... Me is lefte But skyn & boon." [hymn, c.1430]Jazz slang sense of "drum" is from 1927. As an adj., it formerly had a slang sense of "cheating" (1868); sense of "pornographic" is attested from 1968. The verb is attested from 1392, from the noun. Skin-tight is from 1885; skin deep is first attested 1613 in this:
"All the carnall beauty of my wife, Is but skin-deep." [Sir Thomas Overbury, "A Wife," 1613; the poem was a main motive for his murder]
skin (skĭn)
n.
The membranous tissue forming an external protective covering or integument of an animal and consisting of the epidermis and dermis. v. skinned, skin·ning, skins
To bruise, cut, or injure the skin of.
tooth (t&oomacr;th)
n. pl. teeth (tēth)
One of a set of hard, bonelike structures rooted in sockets in the jaws of vertebrates, typically composed of a core of soft pulp surrounded by a layer of hard dentin that is coated with cement or enamel at the crown and used chiefly for biting or chewing food or as a means of attack or defense.
| skin (skĭn) Pronunciation Key
The outer covering of a vertebrate animal, consisting of two layers of cells, a thick inner layer (the dermis) and a thin outer layer (the epidermis). Structures such as hair, scales, or feathers are contained in the skin, as are fat cells, sweat glands, and sensory receptors. Skin provides a protective barrier against disease-causing microorganisms and against the sun's ultraviolet rays. In warm-blooded animals, it aids in temperature regulation, as by insulating against the cold. |
tooth (t th) Pronunciation Key
(click for larger image in new window) Plural teeth (tēth)
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The external tissue that covers the body. As the body's largest organ (it makes up about one twenty-fifth of an adult's weight), the skin serves as a waterproof covering that helps keep out pathogens and protects against temperature extremes and sunlight. The skin also contains special nerve endings that respond to touch, pressure, heat, and cold. The skin has an outer layer, or epidermis, and a layer immediately below, called the dermis.
A hard structure, embedded in the jaws of the mouth, that functions in chewing. The tooth consists of a crown, covered with hard white enamel; a root, which anchors the tooth to the jawbone; and a “neck” between the crown and the root, covered by the gum. Most of the tooth is made up of dentin, which is located directly below the enamel. The soft interior of the tooth, the pulp, contains nerves and blood vessels. Humans have molars for grinding food, incisors for cutting, and canines and bicuspids for tearing.
skin definition
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one of the particulars regarding which retaliatory punishment was to be inflicted (Ex. 21:24; Lev. 24:20; Deut. 19:21). "Gnashing of teeth" =rage, despair (Matt. 8:12; Acts 7:54); "cleanness of teeth" =famine (Amos 4:6); "children's teeth set on edge" =children suffering for the sins of their fathers (Ezek. 18:2).