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A woman who wears clothes to display fashions
Answer for the clue "A woman who wears clothes to display fashions ", 7 letters:
manikin
Alternative clues for the word manikin
Word definitions for manikin in dictionaries
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. a person who is very small but who is not otherwise deformed or abnormal [syn: mannikin , homunculus ] a woman who wears clothes to display fashions; "she was too fat to be a mannequin" [syn: mannequin , mannikin , manakin , fashion model , model ] a ...
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
A manikin is a life-sized anatomical human model used in education and engineering. The best known of these, the Transparent Anatomical Manikin ( TAM ) is a three-dimensional, transparent model of a human being, created for medical instructional purposes. ...
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ He himself had acquired a cadaverous appearance; a shrinking manikin within his leather and steel-scale carapace. ▪ On it was a bronze manikin with a grotesquely enormous erect phallus. ▪ The manikin threw a malevolent look at ...
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Manikin \Man"i*kin\, n. [Also spelled mannikin .] [OD. manneken, dim. of man man. See Man , and -kin .] A little man; a dwarf; a pygmy; a manakin. A model of the human body, made of papier-mache or other material, commonly in detachable pieces, for exhibiting ...
Usage examples of manikin.
From its contents, Lord Pastern, who was dextrous in such matters, had concocted manikins, fly-traps and tiny ships.
The corpses had been shrunk by the fierce heat into black, brittle manikins that smelt disturbingly of roasted pork.
Obviously, such retroactive witchcraft was worthy of further investigation, and the key was the synergetic geometry of the Fuller tetrahedron in which he had kept his manikin during the spell-casting.
The corpses had been shrunk by the fierce heat into black, brittle manikins that smelt disturbingly of roasted pork.
The girl, the prince, his guards seemed like tiny manikins, their shadows dancing in the pale glow of torches.
Jason wandered through the aisles, studying manikins, touching the fabric, making his own appraisals.
Remembering the embalmed head, at first I almost thought that this black manikin was a real baby preserved in some similar manner.
The suit, pressurized at three and a half pounds per square inch, was like a balloon around her, and it kept her body stiff, like a manikin, and she couldn't save herself.
And in Grandfather Staunton's office I had found a curious Students' aid called Philips' Popular Manikin, which was a cardboard man who opened up to show his insides, and who had very discreet privy parts like my own.
Grown around a manikin form over the course of years and under painstakingly con trolled conditions.
He dropped them to the floor, and sat on the back of the fallen manikin, and began carefully peeling the Yeibichai mask from the mass of blue-gray plastic which had been pressed into it.