Therefore, 1-2 touch ups may be necessary for a more lasting result. It’s even normal to lose anywhere from 40-60% of the pigment. The healing process will include some fading. After the initial treatment, your body will start to heal itself. High and dry of beached things (especially ships) is from 1783.If you want your brows to have optimal healed results, touch-ups are highly recommended. 1200 ( heh i mahhte) "exalted and powerful," formerly a compliment to princes, etc. High-water mark is what is left by a flood or highest tide (1550s) figurative use by 1814. High tea (1831) is one at which hot meats are served. the sense is "full, total, complete." High finance (1884) is that concerned with large sums. High noon (when the sun is at the meridian) is from early 14c. High time "fully time, the fullness of time," is from late 14c. High school "school for advanced studies" attested from late 15c. 1200 (Old English had heahsynn "deadly sin, crime"). Of an evil or a punishment, "grave, serious, severe" (as in high treason), c. 1200) is reflected in high-handed and high horse. Sense of "proud, haughty, arrogant, supercilious" (c. Meaning "euphoric or exhilarated from alcohol" is first attested 1620s, of drugs, 1932. 1200 ( high road in the figurative sense is from 1793). Of roads, "most frequented or important," c. Spelling with -gh represents a final guttural sound in the original word, lost since 14c. The group is of uncertain origin perhaps related to Lithuanian kaukara "hill," from PIE *kouko. Old English heh (Anglian), heah (West Saxon) "of great height, tall, conspicuously elevated lofty, exalted, high-class," from Proto-Germanic *hauha- (source also of Old Saxon hoh, Old Norse har, Danish høi, Swedish hög, Old Frisian hach, Dutch hoog, Old High German hoh, German hoch, Gothic hauhs "high " also German Hügel "hill," Old Norse haugr "mound"). 1200), from Old English bræw (West Saxon), *brew (Anglian), from Proto-Germanic *bræwi- "blinker, twinkler" (source also of Old Frisian bre, Old Saxon brawa, Middle Dutch brauwe "eyelid," Old High German brawa "eyebrow," Old Norse bra "eyebrow," Gothic brahw "twinkle, blink," in phrase in brahwa augins "in the twinkling of an eye"). The general word for "eyebrow" in Middle English was brew, breowen (c. The eyebrows then became Old English oferbrua "overbrows" (early Middle English uvere breyhes or briges aboue þe eiges). The extension of Old English bru to "eyelash," and later "eyelid" presumably was by association of the hair of the eyebrow with the hair of the eyelid. Words for "eyelid," "eyelash," and "eyebrow" changed about maddeningly in Old and Middle English (and in all the West Germanic languages). 1200 to "the forehead," especially with reference to movements and expressions that showed emotion or attitude, hence "general expression of the face" (1590s). The -n- in the Old Norse ( brun) and German ( braune) forms of the word are from a genitive plural inflection. 1300, broue, plural broues, brouen, "arch of hair over the eye," also extended to the prominent ridge over the eye (early 14c.), from Old English bru (plural brua), which probably originally meant "eyebrow" (but also was used in the sense of "eyelash"), from Proto-Germanic *brus- "eyebrow" (source also of Old Norse brun), from PIE *bhru- "eyebrow" (source also of Sanskrit bhrus "eyebrow," Greek ophrys, Old Church Slavonic bruvi, Lithuanian bruvis "brow," Old Irish bru "edge").
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |