Flesh

  • 31flesh — See: IN PERSON also IN THE FLESH, NEITHER FISH NOR FOWL also NEITHER FISH, FLESH, NOR FOWL, PRESS THE FLESH, THORN IN THE FLESH …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 32flesh — See: IN PERSON also IN THE FLESH, NEITHER FISH NOR FOWL also NEITHER FISH, FLESH, NOR FOWL, PRESS THE FLESH, THORN IN THE FLESH …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 33Flesh — Cette page d’homonymie répertorie les différents sujets et articles partageant un même nom. Flesh (chair en anglais) désigne : Flesh est un album composé et interprété par David Gray. Flesh, un film de Paul Morrissey et Andy Warhol en 1968.… …

    Wikipédia en Français

  • 34flesh — 1. noun a) the soft tissue of the body, especially muscle and fat. I charge the that thou ete no fleysshe as longe as ye be in the Queste of Sankgreall, nother ye shall drynke no wyne [...]. b) Animal tissue regarded as food; meat …

    Wiktionary

  • 35flesh — 1. The meat of animals used for food. 2. SYN: muscular tissue. [A.S. flaesc] goose f. SYN: cutis anserina. proud f. historic term for exuberant granulations in the granulation tissue on the surface of a wound. * * * flesh flesh …

    Medical dictionary

  • 36flesh — Synonyms and related words: Adam, Hominidae, Homo sapiens, Leatherette, Leatheroid, agnate, alive, all that lives, anatomy, ancestry, animalism, animality, aspic, barbecue, beastliness, bestiality, biosphere, biota, blood, blood relation, blood… …

    Moby Thesaurus

  • 37flesh — n. 1) to mortify the flesh 2) proud flesh * * * [fleʃ] proud flesh to mortify the flesh …

    Combinatory dictionary

  • 38flesh — See: in person also in the flesh, neither fish nor fowl also neither fish, flesh, nor fowl, press the flesh, thorn in the flesh …

    Словарь американских идиом

  • 39flesh — noun 1) his smooth, white flesh Syn: tissue, skin, body, muscle, fat 2) strip the flesh from the bone Syn: meat, muscle 3) a fruit with juicy flesh Syn …

    Synonyms and antonyms dictionary

  • 40flesh — Part of humanity and not of God. Although the word, sarx in Greek, is used in the literal sense of the physiology of the human body, or indeed of horses (Isa. 31:3), meaning that they are mortal, it is also used sometimes of the body itself or of …

    Dictionary of the Bible