- single word requests - Area of the body between legs and genitals . . .
Here is an image in which the area is marked in green: (NSFW, genitals covered) Please note how the 'string' of the taut adductor muscles separates the groin on the front side of the trunk from the area in question on the trunk's underside The image shows a female body and the perineum is invisible below the genitalia in the shadow between the buttocks (Image source -NSFW, explicit)
- word usage - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Reception Reception area - Similar to lobby, a reception area is the part of a public building where you can find an information desk or assistance A reception area is usually not a room, but a portion of a lobby, foyer, or maybe vestibule
- single word requests - What is the name of the area of skin between the . . .
What is the name of the area that is between the nose and the upper lip, circled in figure 1 below? source of face image I have found that the area circled in figure 2, the small indentation under
- Is there a word for the spot between the two eyebrows?
Traditionally it is a bright dot of red colour applied in the centre of the forehead close to the eyebrows, but it can also consist of other colours with a sign or piece of jewelry worn at this location Traditionally, the area between the eyebrows (where the bindi is placed) is said to be the sixth chakra, ajna, the seat of "concealed wisdom"
- with the or not: in areas of VS in the areas of
This will require new frameworks for global cooperation in areas of investment, research and technology This will require new frameworks for global cooperation in the areas of investment, researc
- What is the difference between “area”, “zone”, and “site”?
An excellent question, which I can't do justice to but will comment: an area can be any size, a zone is a 'very special' area (it's a less common word too) and a site is also a synonym of location, so more specific and towards the point-like
- single word requests - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
The word is portico - "A porch or entrance to a building consisting of a covered and often columned area" - WordWeb " [A] porch leading to the entrance of a building, or extended as a colonnade, with a roof structure over a walkway, supported by columns or enclosed by walls " - Wikipedia
- What would you call this fenced training area for horses?
This means it is not a paddock, which is an ordinary field that can be used for training, or a corral, which is a fenced area where horses are kept before being transported (or, of course, where John Wayne turned his horse out while he had a drink in the saloon: perhaps some American contributor can say if this is still in use)
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