26 Answers
Ahh...the latest buzz......"I'm comfortable in my own skin". If you are, you don't have any compulsion to strip off your clothing and show that skin to the world. You would no doubt be doing something which gains respect instead of attracting every pervert and believing that it is a good thing!
12 years ago. Rating: 13 | |
In some cases these pictures posted weren't intentionally meant for the eyes of anyone else but her lover. In other cases it's like everyone has said...the "need" for attention due to a misunderstanding of being secure within themselves.
12 years ago. Rating: 11 | |
tease |t?z|
verb [ trans. ]
1 make fun of or attempt to provoke (a person or animal) in a playful way : Brenda teased her father about the powerboat that he bought but seldom used | [ intrans. ] she was just teasing | [with direct speech ] “Think you're clever, don't you?” she teased.
• tempt (someone) sexually with no intention of satisfying the desire aroused.
2 [ trans. ] gently pull or comb (something tangled, esp. wool or hair) into separate strands : she was teasing out the curls into her usual hairstyle.
• ( tease something out) figurative find something out from a mass of irrelevant information : a historian who tries to tease out the truth.
• comb (hair) in the reverse direction of its natural growth in order to make it appear fuller.
• archaic comb (the surface of woven cloth) to raise a nap.
noun informal
a person who makes fun of someone playfully or unkindly.
• a person who tempts someone sexually with no intention of satisfying the desire aroused.
• [in sing. ] an act of making fun of or tempting someone : she couldn't resist a gentle tease.
DERIVATIVES
teasingly adverb
ORIGIN Old English t?san (sense 2) ; related to Dutch teezen and German dialect zeisen, also to teasel . Sense 1 is a development of the earlier and more serious [irritate by annoying actions] (early 17th cent.), a figurative use of the word's original sense.
12 years ago. Rating: 7 | |