enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Chest hair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chest_hair

    An excessive growth of terminal hair on the body is called hypertrichosis. This medical term has to be distinguished from hirsutism that just affects women. These women can develop terminal hair on the chest following the male pattern as a symptom of an endocrine disease.

  3. Pubic hair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pubic_hair

    Pubic hair (or pubes / ˈ p j uː b iː z /, / p j uː b z /) is terminal body hair that is found in the genital area and pubic region of adolescent and adult humans. The hair is located on and around the sex organs, and sometimes at the top of the inside of the thighs, even extending down the perineum, and to the anal region.

  4. Body hair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Body_hair

    This includes facial hair, chest hair, abdominal hair, leg hair, arm hair, and foot hair. (See Table 1 for development of male body hair during puberty.) Women retain more of the less visible vellus hair, although leg, arm, and foot hair can be noticeable on women. It is not unusual for women to have a few terminal hairs around their nipples as ...

  5. Terminal hair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terminal_hair

    Pubic and axillary hair will develop on both men and women, to the extent that such hair qualifies as a secondary sex characteristic, [6] although males will generally develop terminal hair in more areas. This includes facial hair, chest hair, abdominal hair, leg and arm hair, and foot hair. [7]

  6. Vellus hair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vellus_hair

    Vellus hair is not lanugo hair. Lanugo hair is a much thicker type of hair that normally grows only on fetuses. Vellus hair is differentiated from the more visible terminal or androgenic hair, which develops only during and after puberty, usually to a greater extent on men than it does on women.

  7. Long hair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_hair

    Given that men comprise 49.2% of the US population and women 50.8%, [49] the estimated breakup of hair length by gender among Americans is 47% men with short hair, 22% women with medium hair, 17% women with short hair, 12% women with long hair, 1% men with long hair, and 1% men with medium hair. This leaves, as a total, 64% people with short ...

  8. Abdominal hair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdominal_hair

    Abdominal hair is the hair that grows on the abdomen of humans and non-human mammals, in the region between the pubic area and the thorax (chest). The growth of abdominal hair follows the same pattern on nearly all mammals, vertically from the pubic area upwards and from the thorax downwards to the navel .

  9. Hair fetishism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hair_fetishism

    Hair is one of the defining characteristics of mammals. In humans, hair can be scalp hair, facial hair, chest hair, pubic hair, axillary hair, besides other places. Men tend to have hair in more places than women. Hair does not in itself have any intrinsic sexual value other than the attributes given to it by individuals in a cultural context.