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Skin   /skɪn/   Listen
Skin

noun
1.
A natural protective body covering and site of the sense of touch.  Synonyms: cutis, tegument.
2.
An outer surface (usually thin).
3.
Body covering of a living animal.  Synonyms: hide, pelt.
4.
A person's skin regarded as their life.
5.
The rind of a fruit or vegetable.  Synonym: peel.
6.
A bag serving as a container for liquids; it is made from the hide of an animal.
verb
(past & past part. skinned; pres. part. skinning)
1.
Climb awkwardly, as if by scrambling.  Synonyms: clamber, scramble, shin, shinny, sputter, struggle.
2.
Bruise, cut, or injure the skin or the surface of.  Synonym: scrape.
3.
Remove the bark of a tree.  Synonym: bark.
4.
Strip the skin off.  Synonyms: pare, peel.



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"Skin" Quotes from Famous Books



... immediately after it is killed; this is done by cutting the gills. It is then cut up the back on each side the bone, or chine, as it is commonly called. The bone is taken out, but the tail, with two or three inches of the bone, is left; the head is cut off; all the entrails are taken out, but the skin of the belly is left uncut; the fish is then laid, with the skin undermost, on a board, and is well rubbed and covered over with a mixture of equal quantities of common salt and Jamaica pepper. Some of this mixture ...
— The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction - Volume 10, No. 277, October 13, 1827 • Various

... the latter suddenly turned and fired full in his face. The officer already had his revolver drawn, and the two shots rang out almost together. The policeman was within a fraction of death, for the bullet from his opponent's pistol went through his helmet and just broke the skin of his head. His own aim was truer, and the man he was after fell dead, shot through the heart. I may explain that I have not the slightest sympathy with any policy which tends to put the policeman at the mercy of a tough, ...
— Theodore Roosevelt - An Autobiography by Theodore Roosevelt • Theodore Roosevelt

... whipping-post, this disobedient virgin; she shall have twelve lashes, (for the Chelsea gods are severe, and know the use of "beneficent whip,")—twelve lashes on the naked person,—blows with the terrible slave-whip, beneath which the skin purples in long, winding lines, then breaks and gushes into spirts of red blood, and afterwards cicatrizes into perpetual scars; for disobedience is an immorality not to ...
— The Atlantic Monthly, Vol. 12, No. 72, October, 1863 • Various

... he was not only large of limb but so extraordinarily beautiful of face that I do not believe an angel from Paradise could have been more beautiful than he. He had been born with a singular birth-mark upon his shoulder, which birth-mark had the appearance as of a golden star enstamped upon the skin; wherefore, because of this, the Queen would say: "Launcelot, by reason of that star upon thy shoulder I believe that thou shalt be the star of our house and that thou shalt shine with such remarkable ...
— The Story of the Champions of the Round Table • Howard Pyle

... fly which burrows in the skin and deposits an egg, both in human beings and animals. This produces a maggot, similar in shape to that of the common blow-fly, but much larger, probably analogous to ...
— Harper's Young People, January 6, 1880 - An Illustrated Weekly • Various


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