What is the meaning of TISSUE. Phrases containing TISSUE
See meanings and uses of TISSUE!Slangs & AI meanings
n The labia; the folds of tissue of the female external genitalia.
The rag or sock or tissue or whatever used to shoot your load in. (i.e. to collect ejaculate, or wipe the penis 'clean' after masturbating). Often an unclean rarely washed rag is called a mung rag.
Swollen haemorrhoid tissue.
When a male has an erection, spongy tissues of the penis fill with blood and become firm. In 18 states it is illegal for a male to allow an erection to show through his clothing.
Used to cover the distinctive aroma of marajuana smoke by blowing into a cardboard tube stuffed with tissue paper. This was in use at Virginia Tech.
Train order. (Standard practice is to issue these on tissue paper to facilitate the making of carbon copies)
Paper wads chewed up into an icky mass. Kids would usually use the body of an ink pen with the ink cartridge removed to shoot them like blowguns at each other, or even better, at the back of a teacher's head. Whatver they hit, they stuck to like glue. The bathrooms were covered with similar but much larger paper wads made from wetting balls of toilet tissue and casting it at the ceilings, hoping it would stick. The contributor graduated High School in 1980 and I'm sure they were doing it long before then... there are references to "pea shooters" from over a hundred years ago, which were hollow tubes you blew peas or spit balls through. (ed: I used them to shoot 'pigeon peas' through - I wish I'd known about spit balls!)
crack
or arsewipe n 1. toilet tissue, or anything used to clean oneself after defecation or urination. 2. A thoroughly contemptible, detestable person.
Toilet tissue. So-called because of the similarity between a roll of toilet paper and a perforated coil of tickets.
A sexually-transmitted disease. Caused by the spirochete Treponema pallidum. The spirochete cannot survive outside the body, so contracting the disease by other than intimate sexual contact is rare. The spirochete usually enters the body through invisible breaks in the skin or through intact mucous membranes lining the mouth, rectum, or genital tract. About three weeks later the person develops a sore, called a chancre, at the entry spot. Relatively painless, it is usually found around the genitalia but is sometimes seen on the lips or mouth, on the breasts, or around the rectum. Lymph nodes in the affected area often become enlarged. The chancre contains large numbers of spirochetes and is highly contagious. Even without treatment the chancre slowly heals in several weeks; the spirochetes, however, spread throughout the body, and six weeks to six months later the secondary stage of syphilis occurs, characterized mainly by fever, swollen glands, and a painless, non-itching rash over most of the body, including the genital tract, the mouth, and the palms and soles. Lesions also form in the mouth and around the vagina and anus, and these are highly contagious. Symptoms eventually resolve, and the disease enters its latent phase. Two-thirds of syphilis patients have no further trouble with the disease and are no longer infectious. In some persons, involvement of the brain and spinal cord will occur from several months to years later, causing difficulties with thinking, sensation, and movement. Patients may suffer skin and bone damage or damage to the blood vessels around the heart, resulting in heart failure and sometimes requiring surgery. Some pregnant women transmit the organism to the fetus, resulting in miscarriage, stillbirth, or deformities that may be obvious at birth or may not appear until the child reaches puberty. Syphilis can be diagnosed with a blood test, and all stages of the disease can be cured with the appropriate antibiotic treatment. Damage that has already been done to affected tissues, however, cannot necessarily be repaired; early diagnosis and treatment are therefore extremely important. Patients who have been treated need to take blood tests periodically for two years thereafter. People with syphilis and other STDs have been found to be more susceptible to infection with the HIV virus.
Swollen haemorrhoid tissue..
Train order. (See flimsy)
1 ounce of crack
Fat Free body tissue, comprising mostly muscle. Lean mass is the primary determinant of the body's basal metabolism (calories you burn at rest). In healthy men, bodyfat (bodyweight minus lean body mass) ranges from 8-12%; in women, 18-22%.
one ounce of crack
Usually we are referring to “muscular hypertrophy†in the fitness field. It’s when the volume of your muscle tissue is increased due to the enlargement of the muscle cells because of the stimulus from a  resistance training program. Hypertrophy usually occurs together with hyperplasia – where the size of the cells remain the same but the numbers increase
Hypertrophy = Usually we are referring to “muscular hypertrophy†in the fitness field. It’s when the volume of your muscle tissue is increased due to the enlargement of the muscle cells because of the stimulus from a  resistance training program. Hypertrophy usually occurs together with – where the size of the cells remain the same but the numbers increase
n The labia; the folds of tissue of the female external genitalia.
Crack Cocaine
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n.
One of the substances of which vegetable tissue is composed, differing from cellulose in its solubility in certain media.
n.
A solution of continuity in any of the soft parts of the body, discharging purulent matter, found on a surface, especially one of the natural surfaces of the body, and originating generally in a constitutional disorder; a sore discharging pus. It is distinguished from an abscess, which has its beginning, at least, in the depth of the tissues.
a.
Clothed in, or adorned with, tissue; also, variegated; as, tissued flowers.
n.
Induration; hardening; especially, that form of induration produced in an organ by increase of its interstitial connective tissue.
n.
A morbid swelling, prominence, or growth, on any part of the body; especially, a growth produced by deposition of new tissue; a neoplasm.
n.
The evaporation of water, or exhalation of aqueous vapor, from cells and masses of tissue.
n.
A stylet, usually with a triangular point, used for exploring tissues or for inserting drainage tubes, as in dropsy.
n.
Any change in an organism which alters its general character and mode of life, as in the development of the germ into the embryo, the egg into the animal, the larva into the insect (metamorphosis), etc.; also, the change which the histological units of a tissue are prone to undergo. See Metamorphosis.
imp. & p. p.
of Tissue
n.
One of the changes of assimilation, in which proteid matter which has been transformed, and made a part of the tissue or tissue cells, is endowed with life, and thus enabled to manifest the phenomena of irritability, contractility, etc.
a.
Contained in the veins, or having the same qualities as if contained in the veins, that is, having a dark bluish color and containing an insufficient amount of oxygen so as no longer to be fit for oxygenating the tissues; -- said of the blood, and opposed to arterial.
a.
Not differentiated; specifically (Biol.), homogenous, or nearly so; -- said especially of young or embryonic tissues which have not yet undergone differentiation (see Differentiation, 3), that is, which show no visible separation into their different structural parts.
n.
The removal of tissues from a healthy part, and the insertion of them in another place where there is a lesion; as, the transplantation of tissues in autoplasty.
v. t.
To form tissue of; to interweave.
n.
The removal of a bodily organ or of tissues from one person, and the insertion of them into another person to replace a damaged organ or tissue; as, the transplantation of a heart, kidney, or liver.
n.
One of the elementary materials or fibres, having a uniform structure and a specialized function, of which ordinary animals and plants are composed; a texture; as, epithelial tissue; connective tissue.
a.
Not organized; being without organic structure; specifically (Biol.), not having the different tissues and organs characteristic of living organisms, nor the power of growth and development; as, the unorganized ferments. See the Note under Ferment, n., 1.
n.
A cord or band of fibrous tissue extending from the bladder to the umbilicus.
n.
Fig.: Web; texture; complicated fabrication; connected series; as, a tissue of forgeries, or of falsehood.
n.
A membrane, or layer of tissue, especially when enveloping an organ or part, as the eye.
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