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facial

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English

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Etymology

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    Early 17th century, borrowed from Medieval Latin faciālis (face-to-face, direct, open), from faciēs (form, configuration, figure; face, visage, countenance) +‎ -ālis (-al, adjectival suffix).

    Pronunciation

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    Adjective

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    facial (not comparable)

    1. (relational) Of or affecting the face.
    2. (medicine, relational) Concerned with or used in improving the appearance of the face.
    3. (transferred sense, law) (of a law or regulation validity) On its face; as it appears (as opposed to on a more probing analysis, as it is applied, etc.).
      The facial constitutionality of the law is in question.
      • 2001, Bernard E. Harcourt, chapter 5, in Illusion of Order:
        Discipline is a form of counter-law, of dissymmetry and inequality, that operates under the discourse of juridical power to make possible the stated or facial claims of equality and rights characteristic of the French Revolution.

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    Translations

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    Noun

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    facial (plural facials)

    1. (medicine) A personal care beauty treatment which involves cleansing and moisturizing of the human face.
    2. (film) A kind of early silent film focusing on the facial expressions of the actor.
      • 2004, Simon Popple, Joe Kember, Early Cinema: From Factory Gate to Dream Factory, page 92:
        But in facials, moving picture technology also enabled an exaggeration of this performance tradition, bringing a new emphasis to the details []
    3. (slang, sports) (in some contact sports) A foul play which involves one player hitting another's face.
    4. (slang, pornography, sex) A sex act of ejaculation onto another person's face.
      Synonym: money shot
      Coordinate term: self-facial
      Long-Dong Chuck gave his co-star a creamy facial.
      • 2021, Rachel Thompson, chapter 5, in Rough, Random House:
        For the piece she spoke to two women who said they enjoy facials, and who described the act as ‘the mark of a job well done’ and ‘really hot’. But Reid concludes that she herself finds facials deeply unpleasant.

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    Translations

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    References

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    Anagrams

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    Catalan

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    Etymology

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    Borrowed from Latin faciālis.

    Pronunciation

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    Adjective

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    facial m or f (masculine and feminine plural facials)

    1. facial
      músculs facials
      facial muscles

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    Chinese

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    Etymology

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    From English facial.

    Pronunciation

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    Noun

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    facial

    1. (Hong Kong Cantonese) facial; personal care beauty treatment which involves cleansing and moisturizing of the human face
      facial [Cantonese]  ―  zou6 fei1 sou4 [Jyutping]  ―  to have a facial treatment

    References

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    French

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    Etymology

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    From Latin faciālis.

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    facial (feminine faciale, masculine plural faciaux, feminine plural faciales)

    1. facial

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    Portuguese

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    Etymology

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      Borrowed from Latin faciālis.

      Pronunciation

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      • (Brazil) IPA(key): /fa.siˈaw/ [fa.sɪˈaʊ̯], (faster pronunciation) /faˈsjaw/ [faˈsjaʊ̯]
       

      • Rhymes: (Portugal) -al, (Brazil) -aw
      • Hyphenation: fa‧ci‧al

      Adjective

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      facial m or f (plural faciais)

      1. facial (of the face)

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      Romanian

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      Etymology

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      Borrowed from French facial.

      Adjective

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      facial m or n (feminine singular facială, masculine plural faciali, feminine/neuter plural faciale)

      1. facial

      Declension

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      Declension of facial
      singular plural
      masculine neuter feminine masculine neuter feminine
      nominative-
      accusative
      indefinite facial facială faciali faciale
      definite facialul faciala facialii facialele
      genitive-
      dative
      indefinite facial faciale faciali faciale
      definite facialului facialei facialilor facialelor

      Spanish

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      Etymology

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      From Latin faciālis.

      Pronunciation

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      Adjective

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      facial m or f (masculine and feminine plural faciales)

      1. facial

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      Further reading

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