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  2. Artificial nails - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artificial_nails

    Artificial nails, also known as fake nails, false nails, acrylic nails, press ons, nail extensions or nail enhancements, are extensions placed over fingernails as fashion accessories. Many artificial nail designs attempt to mimic the appearance of real fingernails as closely as possible, while others may deliberately stray in favor of an ...

  3. The hidden dangers of acrylic nails and why you might ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/2015-10-22-the-hidden...

    3. Depending on your nail strength, acrylics may cause a splitting or painful nail plate. Pay close attention to how strong and think your nails are. Extremely thin nails may not be the best for ...

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  5. Nail art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nail_art

    Nail art depicting characters from the video game Pac-Man. The nail-care industry has been expanding ever since the invention of modern nail polish. [27] Nail art's popularity in media started with the printed press with women's magazines. It had an essential rollout as not a mainstream fashion trend before the 2000s.

  6. List of Saturday Night Live commercial parodies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Saturday_Night...

    Corn Chip Nail Tips – Maya Rudolph and Tracy Morgan appear in this parody of "hip" potato chip commercials, promoting corn chips that double as false fingernails. [166] Corn Syrup Producers of America — In this trade group ad, Kristen Wiig inquisitively asks Nasim Pedrad about why she serves her daughter juice with high-fructose corn syrup ...

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  8. Nail (anatomy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nail_(anatomy)

    The nail plate (corpus unguis) [3] sometimes referred to as the nail body, is the visible hard nail area from the nail root to the free edge, made of translucent keratin protein. Several layers of dead, compacted cells cause the nail to be strong but flexible. Its (transverse) shape is determined by the form of the underlying bone.

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