A spandex mask spread over his face, covering his eyes and nose. They should have pointed the nose of the Airbus down and applied more force. Benjy sympathized with his wishes, changed his attitude and only managed to touch the nose of his enemy. The fight continues and Chan is beaten and suffers a broken nose. So he convinced his superiors to let him take some devices home so he could assess whether cloth masks reduced the number of potentially virus-laden particles that spit out people`s mouths and noses when they talk, cough or breathe. He walked first to one side, then to the other, digging into the earth with his funny rubbery nose. I`ll wrinkle my nose if you offer me the rest of the delicious pastries you`ve nibbled on. He closed his fist and hit Butterface, a weak but well-meaning right-hander, on the nose. The virus could have spread if rodents groomed themselves, rubbed their noses or moved. There, clusters of nerve endings called glomeruli organize olfactory signals received in the nose.
Middle English, Old English Nosu; Similar to Old High German nasa nose, Latin nasus Also your nose is in front of your face and the sun will rise tomorrow. Nose (nosar in the present, nose in the past tense, nose of the participle, passive infinitive nose, present participle nose, imperative nose / not) His nose was hook-shaped and quite large, his eyes were blue, shiny like steel and a little wide. These are words that are often used in combination with the nose. Hold your nose (= squeeze both sides) and put your head under water. The biggest stumbling block is that we still don`t know how individual smells activate the entire neural highway from nose to brain. From Middle English nose, Old English nosu, West Proto-Germanic *nosu (cf. Sater Frison noose, West Frisian noas, Dutch neus, Swedish nos, Norwegian nos («snout»), variant of *nasō (cf. Low German nees, nes, näs, German nose, Swedish näsa, Norwegian nese («nose»)), ancient Proto-Indo-European dual *néh₂s- ~ *nh₂es- («nose, nostril») (cf. Latin nāris («nostril»), nāsus («nose»), Lithuanian nósis, Russian нос (nos), Sanskrit नासा (nā́sā, «nostrils»)).
Like brain regions, each stage looks for different types of general pictorial elements, as the brain finds them, rather than looking for eyes, nose, etc. The girl started humming as she powdered her nose with a white glove and lay in a powder box. Probably from the Old French nous, nos, nominative singular de nou, no («knot»). You can also find related words, phrases, and synonyms in the following topics:.