torso

listen to the pronunciation of torso
English - Turkish
insan gövdesi
kolsuz
bacaksız
ve başsız insan vücudu
gövde

Sami gövdesinin fotoğraflarını Leyla'ya gönderdi. - Sami sent Layla photos of his torso.

Heykel gövdesi
Yarım kalmış çalışma
Kolsuz ve başsız gövde
{i} gövde heykeli
güdük şey
{i} (insana ait) gövde
gövde (insana ait)
Turkish - Turkish
English - English
The part of the (human) body from the neck to the groin, that is, the body excluding the head and limbs
Your torso is the main part of your body, and does not include your head, arms, and legs
Trunk of human body
The trunk or body of a statue without any head, arms, or legs
the body excluding the head and neck and limbs; "they moved their arms and legs and bodies
The part of the body that provides most power for paddling power in paddling does not come from the arms, but through twisting the body
Middle Eastern dance focuses the viewer's gaze on the torso ¾ the region of the body from the shoulders to the hips ¾ because this is where the rhythms are most frequently displayed Remember that the point is not to expose the body but to illustrate the musical rhythms and express the joy of movement
The human body, as distinguished from the head and limbs; in sculpture, the trunk of a statue, mutilated of head and limbs; as, the torso of Hercules
{i} body of a human being without the head or arms and legs; image or sculpture of a body lacking limbs or the head; something that is incomplete or mutilated
the body excluding the head and neck and limbs; "they moved their arms and legs and bodies"
A statue of the human body with the head and limbs either omitted or removed May also refer to the trunk of the human body or to a thing that is truncated or unfinished
Belvedere Torso
Hellenistic marble torso of a male figure 5 ft 3 in. (1.6 m) high seated on a rock. It is named after the Belvedere court in Vatican City, where it once stood; it is now in the Vatican Museum. It is signed by the Greek sculptor Apollonius and possibly dates from the 1st century BC. Well known by 1500, it had a profound influence on Michelangelo and other Renaissance artists
The torso
trunk
torsi
plural of torso
torso

    Hyphenation

    tor·so

    Turkish pronunciation

    tôrsō

    Synonyms

    trunk

    Pronunciation

    /ˈtôrˌsō/ /ˈtɔːrˌsoʊ/

    Etymology

    [ 'tor-(")sO ] (noun.) 1722. From Italian torso, from Latin thyrsus, from Ancient Greek θύρσος (thúrsos, “Bacchic staff”).
Favorites