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The lip plate, also known as a lip plug, lip disc, or mouth plate, is a form of body modification. Increasingly large discs (usually circular, and made from clay or wood) are inserted into a pierced hole in either the upper or lower lip , or both, thereby stretching it.
Lip piercings can be placed anywhere around the mouth, but the surface of the lip is not typically pierced itself, except for horizontal lip piercings and canine bites. Piercings in specific positions have certain names. Monroe piercings, for example, are labret studs worn on the upper lip where Marilyn Monroe had her famous beauty mark.
A tongue frenulum piercing is a piercing through the frenulum underneath the tongue, known as the frenulum linguae, and commonly the tongue web piercing. "Venom bites" is the term given to two tongue piercings placed side by side on the tongue, which are considered to be more painful than a regular tongue piercing through the tongue's center.
Angel Bites; Ashley; Canine Bites; Cyber Bites; Dahlia; Dolphin Bites; Jestrum; Labret; Lateral Labret; Lower-Lip Frenelum, also known as Frowny; Monroe, also known ...
A lip frenulum piercing is a body piercing through the frenulum of either the upper or lower lip. A piercing through the upper lip frenulum (frenulum labii superioris) is sometimes called a "smiley", [1] because it is usually only seen when smiling, [3] or a "scrumper". [1] Similarly, the lower lip frenulum piercing is sometimes referred to as ...
Being mean to other people for enjoying things, like brightly colored clothes, piercings, or sweatpants. I mean, I might be more comfortable in earth toned dress clothes, but to each their own.
“I’ll never show you my coochie so you’ll never know,” she quipped. When pressed again to reveal “how many” piercings she has in her collection she joked, “You can’t see my coochie ...
The traditional pronunciation of labret in anthropology is / ˈ l eɪ b r ə t / LAY-brət.It derives from the Latin labrum "lip" and the diminutive suffix -et. However, many in the body-piercing industry give it the pseudo-French pronunciation / l ɒ ˈ b r eɪ / lo-BRAY, though the French word is in fact borrowed from the English.